Spina C A, Kwoh T J, Chowers M Y, Guatelli J C, Richman D D
Department of Pathology, University of California San Diego, La Jolla 92093-0679.
J Exp Med. 1994 Jan 1;179(1):115-23. doi: 10.1084/jem.179.1.115.
The viral regulatory gene, nef, is unique to the human immunodeficiency viruses (HIV) and their related primate lentiviruses. Expression of the nef gene has been shown to be essential to the maintenance of high levels of virus replication and the development of pathogenesis in the animal model of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infection. In contrast to this in vivo model, the use of standard T cell culture systems to study nef function in vitro has produced a spectrum of contradictory results, and has failed to demonstrate a significant positive influence of nef on viral life cycle. We have developed a cell model to study regulation of HIV-1 replication that we believe reflects more accurately virus-cell interactions as they occur in vivo. Our experimental system used acute virus infection of purified, quiescent CD4 lymphocytes and subsequent induction of viral replication through T cell activation. With this cell model, NL4-3 virus clones with open and mutated nef reading frames were compared for replication competence. The clones with nef mutations showed reproducible and significant reductions in both rates of growth and maximal titers achieved. The degree of reduced replication was dependent on initial virus inoculum and the timing of T cell activation. The influence of nef was highly significant for induction of virus replication from a latent state within resting CD4 cells. Its effect was less apparent for virus infection of fully proliferating CD4 cells. This study demonstrates that nef confers a positive growth advantage to HIV-1 that becomes readily discernable in the primary cell setting of virus induction through T cell activation. The experimental cell model, which we describe here, provides not only a means to study nef function in vitro, but also provides important clues to the function of nef in HIV infection in vivo.
病毒调节基因nef是人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)及其相关的灵长类慢病毒所特有的。在猿猴免疫缺陷病毒(SIV)感染的动物模型中,已证明nef基因的表达对于维持高水平的病毒复制和发病机制的发展至关重要。与这种体内模型相反,使用标准T细胞培养系统在体外研究nef功能产生了一系列相互矛盾的结果,并且未能证明nef对病毒生命周期有显著的积极影响。我们开发了一种细胞模型来研究HIV-1复制的调节,我们认为该模型能更准确地反映体内发生的病毒-细胞相互作用。我们的实验系统使用纯化的静止CD4淋巴细胞进行急性病毒感染,随后通过T细胞激活诱导病毒复制。利用这个细胞模型,比较了具有开放和突变nef阅读框的NL4-3病毒克隆的复制能力。具有nef突变的克隆在生长速率和达到的最大滴度方面均表现出可重复且显著的降低。复制减少的程度取决于初始病毒接种量和T细胞激活的时间。nef对从静止CD4细胞内的潜伏状态诱导病毒复制的影响非常显著。对于完全增殖的CD4细胞的病毒感染,其作用不太明显。这项研究表明,nef赋予HIV-1一种积极的生长优势,在通过T细胞激活诱导病毒的原代细胞环境中这种优势很容易被察觉。我们在此描述的实验细胞模型不仅提供了一种在体外研究nef功能的方法,还为nef在体内HIV感染中的功能提供了重要线索。