Rudensey L M, Kimata J T, Benveniste R E, Overbaugh J
Department of Microbiology, University of Washington, Seattle 98195.
Virology. 1995 Mar 10;207(2):528-42. doi: 10.1006/viro.1995.1113.
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) typically evolves from a macrophage-tropic, noncytopathic virus at early asymptomatic stages of infection to a T-cell-tropic, cytopathic, and syncytia-inducing virus population as humans progress to AIDS. This suggests that changes in virus phenotype may influence disease. Because simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infection in macaques is a common model system for HIV-1 pathogenesis, we determined whether SIV infection in macaques that develop simian AIDS is associated with a similar shift in viral tropism, replication, and cytopathic properties. The virus that infected the monkeys (SIVMneCL8) and predominated at early times in infection is a macrophage-tropic virus that replicates with relatively low efficiency in human T cell lines. The variant populations that arise in macaques as they progress to AIDS are more infectious for human T cell lines, exhibiting enhanced replication in CEM x 174 cells and an expanded host range that includes Molt-4 Clone 8 cells. Infections starting with equal doses of the viruses demonstrated that the late variants are cytopathic and syncytia-inducing compared to SIVMneCL8, but the variants replicate less efficiently in primary macaque macrophages. V3 sequences were generally conserved between the early and the late variants, suggesting that changes in SIVMne tropism, replication, and cytopathicity were apparently not due to alterations in V3. This study demonstrates important similarities in the phenotypic viral changes that accompany development of AIDS in SIV and HIV-1 infections and suggest that SIV may provide a model system for determining whether the rapidly replicating, T-cell-tropic cytopathic variants present late in infection and disease are indeed important in determining progression to AIDS.
人类免疫缺陷病毒1型(HIV-1)通常在感染的早期无症状阶段从嗜巨噬细胞、无细胞病变的病毒演变为嗜T细胞、具有细胞病变和诱导融合特性的病毒群体,随着人类病情发展至艾滋病阶段。这表明病毒表型的变化可能会影响疾病。由于猕猴感染猿猴免疫缺陷病毒(SIV)是HIV-1发病机制的常用模型系统,我们确定了在发展为猿猴艾滋病的猕猴中,SIV感染是否与病毒嗜性、复制和细胞病变特性的类似转变有关。感染猴子的病毒(SIVMneCL8)在感染早期占主导地位,是一种嗜巨噬细胞病毒,在人T细胞系中复制效率相对较低。随着猕猴病情发展至艾滋病阶段出现的变异群体对人T细胞系更具感染性,在CEM x 174细胞中表现出增强的复制能力,并且宿主范围扩大,包括Molt-4 Clone 8细胞。用等量病毒起始的感染表明,与SIVMneCL8相比,晚期变异体具有细胞病变性并能诱导融合,但这些变异体在原代猕猴巨噬细胞中的复制效率较低。早期和晚期变异体之间的V3序列通常是保守的,这表明SIVMne嗜性、复制和细胞病变性的变化显然不是由于V3的改变。这项研究证明了SIV和HIV-1感染中伴随艾滋病发展的病毒表型变化具有重要的相似性,并表明SIV可能为确定感染后期和疾病中出现的快速复制、嗜T细胞的细胞病变变异体在决定艾滋病进展中是否确实重要提供一个模型系统。