Li Guan-Han, Anderson Caroline, Jaeger Laura, Do Thao, Major Eugene O, Nath Avindra
aSection of Infections of the Nervous System, National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Stroke bLaboratory of Cell Biology, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute cLaboratory of Molecular Medicine and Neuroscience, National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
AIDS. 2015 Apr 24;29(7):755-66. doi: 10.1097/QAD.0000000000000605.
HIV reservoir in the brain represents a major barrier for curing HIV infection. As the most abundant, long-lived cell type, astrocytes play a critical role in maintaining the reservoir; however, the mechanism of infection remains unknown. Here, we determine how viral transmission occurs from HIV-infected lymphocytes to astrocytes by cell-to-cell contact.
Human astrocytes were exposed to HIV-infected lymphocytes and monitored by live-imaging, confocal microscopy, transmission and three-dimensional electron microscopy. A panel of receptor antagonists was used to determine the mechanism of viral entry.
We found that cell-to-cell contact resulted in efficient transmission of X4 or X4R5-using viruses from T lymphocytes to astrocytes. In co-cultures of astrocytes with HIV-infected lymphocytes, the interaction occurred through a dynamic process of attachment and detachment of the two cell types. Infected lymphocytes invaginated into astrocytes or the contacts occurred via filopodial extensions from either cell type, leading to the formation of virological synapses. In the synapses, budding of immature or incomplete HIV particles from lymphocytes occurred directly onto the membranes of astrocytes. This cell-to-cell transmission could be almost completely blocked by anti-CXCR4 antibody and its antagonist, but only partially inhibited by anti-CD4, ICAM1 antibodies.
Cell-to-cell transmission was mediated by a unique mechanism by which immature viral particles initiated a fusion process in a CXCR4-dependent, CD4-independent manner. These observations have important implications for developing approaches to prevent formation of HIV reservoirs in the brain.
大脑中的HIV储存库是治愈HIV感染的主要障碍。作为最丰富、寿命最长的细胞类型,星形胶质细胞在维持储存库方面起着关键作用;然而,感染机制仍不清楚。在此,我们确定病毒如何通过细胞间接触从感染HIV的淋巴细胞传播到星形胶质细胞。
将人类星形胶质细胞暴露于感染HIV的淋巴细胞,并通过实时成像、共聚焦显微镜、透射和三维电子显微镜进行监测。使用一组受体拮抗剂来确定病毒进入的机制。
我们发现细胞间接触导致使用X4或X4R5的病毒从T淋巴细胞有效传播到星形胶质细胞。在星形胶质细胞与感染HIV的淋巴细胞的共培养中,相互作用通过两种细胞类型附着和分离的动态过程发生。受感染的淋巴细胞内陷进入星形胶质细胞,或者通过任何一种细胞类型的丝状伪足延伸形成接触,导致病毒突触的形成。在突触中,未成熟或不完全的HIV颗粒从淋巴细胞出芽直接发生在星形胶质细胞的膜上。这种细胞间传播几乎可以被抗CXCR4抗体及其拮抗剂完全阻断,但仅被抗CD4、ICAM1抗体部分抑制。
细胞间传播由一种独特的机制介导,即未成熟病毒颗粒以CXCR4依赖、CD4非依赖的方式启动融合过程。这些观察结果对开发预防大脑中HIV储存库形成的方法具有重要意义。