Ke Ruian, Cong Mian-Er, Li David, García-Lerma J Gerardo, Perelson Alan S
Department of Mathematics, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA.
Laboratory Branch, Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
J Virol. 2017 Aug 24;91(18). doi: 10.1128/JVI.00352-17. Print 2017 Sep 15.
Progressive T cell depletion during chronic human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV) infection is a key mechanism that leads to the development of AIDS. Recent studies have suggested that most T cells in the tissue die through pyroptosis triggered by abortive infection, i.e., infection of resting T cells in which HIV failed to complete reverse transcription. However, the contribution of abortive infection to T cell loss and how quickly abortively infected cells die , key parameters for a quantitative understanding of T cell population dynamics, are not clear. Here, we infected rhesus macaques with simian-human immunodeficiency viruses (SHIV) and followed the dynamics of both plasma SHIV RNA and total cell-associated SHIV DNA. Fitting mathematical models to the data, we estimate that upon infection a majority of CD4 T cells (approximately 65%, on average) become abortively infected and die at a relatively high rate of 0.27 day (half-life, 2.6 days). This confirms the importance of abortive infection in driving T cell depletion. Further, we find evidence suggesting that an immune response may be restricting viral infection 1 to 3 weeks after infection. Our study serves as a step forward toward a quantitative understanding of the mechanisms driving T cell depletion during HIV infection. In HIV-infected patients, progressive CD4 T cell loss ultimately leads to the development of AIDS. The mechanisms underlying this T cell loss are not clear. Recent experimental data suggest that the majority of CD4 T cells in tissue die through abortive infection, where the accumulation of incomplete HIV transcripts triggers cell death. To investigate the role of abortive infection in driving CD4 T cell loss , we infected macaques with simian-human immunodeficiency viruses (SHIV) and followed the viral kinetics of both plasma RNA and cell-associated DNA during infection. Fitting mathematical models, we estimated that a large fraction of infected cells dies through abortive infection and has a half-life of approximately 2.6 days. Our results provide the first quantitative estimates of parameters characterizing abortive infection and support the notion that abortive infection represents an important mechanism underlying progressive CD4 T cell depletion .
在慢性人类免疫缺陷病毒1型(HIV)感染过程中,T细胞的渐进性耗竭是导致艾滋病发展的关键机制。最近的研究表明,组织中的大多数T细胞通过由流产感染引发的细胞焦亡而死亡,即静息T细胞被感染,而HIV未能完成逆转录。然而,流产感染对T细胞损失的贡献以及流产感染的细胞死亡速度,这两个对于定量理解T细胞群体动态的关键参数尚不清楚。在此,我们用猿猴-人类免疫缺陷病毒(SHIV)感染恒河猴,并追踪血浆SHIV RNA和总细胞相关SHIV DNA的动态变化。通过将数学模型拟合到数据中,我们估计在感染后,大多数CD4 T细胞(平均约65%)会发生流产感染,并以相对较高的0.27天的速率死亡(半衰期为2.6天)。这证实了流产感染在驱动T细胞耗竭中的重要性。此外,我们发现有证据表明免疫反应可能在感染后1至3周限制病毒感染。我们的研究朝着定量理解HIV感染期间驱动T细胞耗竭的机制迈出了一步。在HIV感染患者中,CD4 T细胞的渐进性损失最终导致艾滋病的发展。这种T细胞损失的潜在机制尚不清楚。最近的实验数据表明,组织中的大多数CD4 T细胞通过流产感染而死亡,其中不完全HIV转录本的积累触发细胞死亡。为了研究流产感染在驱动CD4 T细胞损失中的作用,我们用猿猴-人类免疫缺陷病毒(SHIV)感染猕猴,并追踪感染期间血浆RNA和细胞相关DNA的病毒动力学。通过拟合数学模型,我们估计很大一部分受感染细胞通过流产感染死亡,半衰期约为2.6天。我们的结果首次对表征流产感染的参数进行了定量估计,并支持流产感染是CD4 T细胞渐进性耗竭的重要潜在机制这一观点。