Stanley S K, McCune J M, Kaneshima H, Justement J S, Sullivan M, Boone E, Baseler M, Adelsberger J, Bonyhadi M, Orenstein J
Laboratory of Immunoregulation, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892.
J Exp Med. 1993 Oct 1;178(4):1151-63. doi: 10.1084/jem.178.4.1151.
Infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) results in immunosuppression and depletion of circulating CD4+ T cells. Since the thymus is the primary organ in which T cells mature it is of interest to examine the effects of HIV infection in this tissue. HIV infection has been demonstrated in the thymuses of infected individuals and thymocytes have been previously demonstrated to be susceptible to HIV infection both in vivo, using the SCID-hu mouse, and in vitro. The present study sought to determine which subsets of thymocytes were infected in the SCID-hu mouse model and to evaluate HIV-related alterations in the thymic microenvironment. Using two different primary HIV isolates, infection was found in CD4+/CD8+ double positive thymocytes as well as in both the CD4+ and CD8+ single positive subsets of thymocytes. The kinetics of infection and resulting viral burden differed among the three thymocyte subsets and depended on which HIV isolate was used for infection. Thymic epithelial (TE) cells were also shown to endocytose virus and to often contain copious amounts of viral RNA in the cytoplasm by in situ hybridization, although productive infection of these cells could not be definitively shown. Furthermore, degenerating TE cells were observed even without detection of HIV in the degenerating cells. Two striking morphologic patterns of infection were seen, involving either predominantly thymocyte infection and depletion, or TE cell involvement with detectable cytoplasmic viral RNA and/or TE cell toxicity. Thus, a variety of cells in the human thymus is susceptible to HIV infection, and infection with HIV results in a marked disruption of the thymic microenvironment leading to depletion of thymocytes and degeneration of TE cells.
人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)感染会导致免疫抑制以及循环CD4+ T细胞的耗竭。由于胸腺是T细胞成熟的主要器官,因此研究HIV感染对该组织的影响具有重要意义。在受感染个体的胸腺中已证实存在HIV感染,并且先前已证明胸腺细胞在体内(使用SCID-hu小鼠)和体外均易受HIV感染。本研究旨在确定在SCID-hu小鼠模型中哪些胸腺细胞亚群被感染,并评估胸腺微环境中与HIV相关的改变。使用两种不同的原发性HIV分离株,发现CD4+/CD8+双阳性胸腺细胞以及CD4+和CD8+单阳性胸腺细胞亚群均被感染。三个胸腺细胞亚群的感染动力学和由此产生的病毒载量有所不同,并且取决于用于感染的HIV分离株。胸腺上皮(TE)细胞也被证明可内吞病毒,并且通过原位杂交在细胞质中常常含有大量病毒RNA,尽管无法明确显示这些细胞发生了 productive infection(此处原文有误,推测可能是productive infection,可译为“有效感染”)。此外,即使在退化细胞中未检测到HIV,也观察到了退化的TE细胞。观察到两种明显的感染形态学模式,一种主要涉及胸腺细胞感染和耗竭,另一种涉及TE细胞,伴有可检测到的细胞质病毒RNA和/或TE细胞毒性。因此,人类胸腺中的多种细胞易受HIV感染,并且HIV感染会导致胸腺微环境的明显破坏,从而导致胸腺细胞耗竭和TE细胞退化。