Montefiori D C, Cornell R J, Zhou J Y, Zhou J T, Hirsch V M, Johnson P R
Department of Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710.
Virology. 1994 Nov 15;205(1):82-92. doi: 10.1006/viro.1994.1622.
Complement control proteins include a group of membrane-bound surface antigens that protect cells from complement lysis by preventing formation of the membrane attack complex (MAC) of complement. HIV-1 and SIV are known to possess cellular proteins, making it possible that some of them contribute to the ability of these viruses to evade complement lysis. Three complement control proteins, CD46 (membrane cofactor protein), CD55 (decay accelerating protein), and CD59 (HRF20), were found by flow cytometry to be expressed on the surface of CD4+ cell lines commonly used for HIV-1 and SIV synthesis. Monoclonal antibodies to each of these proteins precipitated HIV-1 IIIB and SIV delta/B670 synthesized in CEM x 174 cells and two primary HIV-1 isolates synthesized in peripheral blood mononuclear cells, indicating that CD46, CD55, and CD59 are physically associated with the virus membrane after the virus has been released from the surface of infected cells. Additional experiments showed that the precipitated material contained infectious virus, confirming that whole virus was precipitated. Evidence that CD46 and CD59 are immunogenic in macaques was found when anti-cell antibodies in plasmas from macaques immunized with human cell-grown SIV blocked anti-CD46 and anti-CD59 from binding to the surface of CEM x 174 cells. Anti-cell antibodies rendered HIV-1 susceptible to complement lysis as measured by the release of p24 core protein, and consistently produced a complement-dependent reduction in HIV-1 and SIV infectivity of 1-3 logs. These results demonstrate that CD46, CD55, and CD59 are common surface constituents of HIV-1 and SIV. The results also raise the possibility that the mechanism of SIV vaccine protection attributed to anti-cell antibodies could have involved complement-mediated virolysis.
补体调节蛋白包括一组膜结合表面抗原,它们通过阻止补体膜攻击复合物(MAC)的形成来保护细胞免受补体溶解。已知HIV-1和SIV拥有细胞蛋白,因此其中一些蛋白有可能有助于这些病毒逃避补体溶解。通过流式细胞术发现,三种补体调节蛋白,即CD46(膜辅因子蛋白)、CD55(衰变加速因子)和CD59(HRF20),在常用于HIV-1和SIV合成的CD4+细胞系表面表达。针对这些蛋白的单克隆抗体沉淀了在CEM x 174细胞中合成的HIV-1 IIIB和SIV delta/B670,以及在人外周血单核细胞中合成的两种原发性HIV-1分离株,这表明在病毒从受感染细胞表面释放后,CD46、CD55和CD59与病毒膜存在物理关联。进一步的实验表明,沉淀物质中含有感染性病毒,证实沉淀的是完整病毒。当用人类细胞培养的SIV免疫的猕猴血浆中的抗细胞抗体阻断抗CD46和抗CD59与CEM x 174细胞表面结合时,发现CD46和CD59在猕猴中具有免疫原性。抗细胞抗体使HIV-1易于被补体溶解,这通过p24核心蛋白的释放来衡量,并且持续导致HIV-1和SIV感染性以1至3个对数的幅度呈补体依赖性降低。这些结果表明,CD46、CD55和CD59是HIV-1和SIV常见的表面成分。这些结果还增加了一种可能性,即归因于抗细胞抗体的SIV疫苗保护机制可能涉及补体介导的病毒溶解。