Rodrigues Vasco, Ruffin Nicolas, San-Roman Mabel, Benaroch Philippe
Institut Curie, PSL Research University, INSERM U932, Paris, France.
Institut Curie, PSL Research University, UMR3216, Paris, France.
Front Immunol. 2017 Nov 30;8:1698. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.01698. eCollection 2017.
Cells of the myeloid lineage, particularly macrophages, serve as primary hosts for HIV , along with CD4 T lymphocytes. Macrophages are present in virtually every tissue of the organism, including locations with negligible T cell colonization, such as the brain, where HIV-mediated inflammation may lead to pathological sequelae. Moreover, infected macrophages are present in multiple other tissues. Recent evidence obtained in humanized mice and macaque models highlighted the capacity of macrophages to sustain HIV replication in the absence of T cells. Combined with the known resistance of the macrophage to the cytopathic effects of HIV infection, such data bring a renewed interest in this cell type both as a vehicle for viral spread as well as a viral reservoir. While our understanding of key processes of HIV infection of macrophages is far from complete, recent years have nevertheless brought important insight into the uniqueness of the macrophage infection. Productive infection of macrophages by HIV can occur by different routes including from phagocytosis of infected T cells. In macrophages, HIV assembles and buds into a peculiar plasma membrane-connected compartment that preexists to the infection. While the function of such compartment remains elusive, it supposedly allows for the persistence of infectious viral particles over extended periods of time and may play a role on viral transmission. As cells of the innate immune system, macrophages have the capacity to detect and respond to viral components. Recent data suggest that such sensing may occur at multiple steps of the viral cycle and impact subsequent viral spread. We aim to provide an overview of the HIV-macrophage interaction along the multiple stages of the viral life cycle, extending when pertinent such observations to additional myeloid cell types such as dendritic cells or blood monocytes.
髓系谱系细胞,尤其是巨噬细胞,与CD4 T淋巴细胞一样,是HIV的主要宿主。巨噬细胞几乎存在于机体的每个组织中,包括T细胞定植极少的部位,如大脑,在那里HIV介导的炎症可能导致病理后遗症。此外,受感染的巨噬细胞还存在于其他多种组织中。在人源化小鼠和猕猴模型中获得的最新证据表明,巨噬细胞在没有T细胞的情况下也有维持HIV复制的能力。结合已知的巨噬细胞对HIV感染细胞病变效应的抗性,这些数据重新引发了人们对这种细胞类型作为病毒传播载体和病毒储存库的兴趣。虽然我们对HIV感染巨噬细胞的关键过程的了解还远远不够完整,但近年来已经对巨噬细胞感染的独特性有了重要的认识。HIV对巨噬细胞的有效感染可以通过不同途径发生,包括吞噬受感染的T细胞。在巨噬细胞中,HIV组装并芽生到一个在感染前就已存在的特殊的与质膜相连的区室中。虽然这个区室的功能仍然不清楚,但推测它能使感染性病毒颗粒长时间持续存在,并可能在病毒传播中起作用。作为先天免疫系统的细胞,巨噬细胞有能力检测并对病毒成分做出反应。最近的数据表明,这种感知可能发生在病毒周期的多个步骤,并影响随后的病毒传播。我们旨在概述HIV与巨噬细胞在病毒生命周期多个阶段的相互作用,并在相关时将这些观察结果扩展到其他髓系细胞类型,如树突状细胞或血液单核细胞。