Connor R I, Paxton W A, Sheridan K E, Koup R A
Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center and The Rockefeller University, New York, New York 10016, USA.
J Virol. 1996 Dec;70(12):8758-64. doi: 10.1128/JVI.70.12.8758-8764.1996.
Despite multiple, high-risk sexual exposures, some individuals remain uninfected with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). CD4+ lymphocytes from these individuals are less susceptible to infection in vitro with some strains of HIV-1, suggesting that the phenotype of the virus may influence its ability to interact with certain CD4+ cells. In the present study, we examined the susceptibility of CD4+ T lymphocytes and macrophages from two exposed uninfected individuals (EU2 and EU3) to infection with a panel of biologically cloned isolates of HIV-1 having either a non-syncytium-inducing (NSI) or a syncytium-inducing (SI) phenotype. Our results indicate that CD4+ T lymphocytes from EU2 and EU3 are resistant to infection with NSI isolates of HIV-1 but are susceptible to infection with primary SI isolates. In addition, we found that macrophages from EU2 and EU3 are resistant to infection with both NSI and SI isolates. The latter finding was confirmed by using several uncloned NSI and SI isolates obtained from patients during acute HIV-1 infection. In further experiments, env clones encoding glycoproteins characteristic of NSI or SI viruses were used in single-cycle infectivity assays to evaluate infection of CD4+ lymphocytes and macrophages from EU2 and EU3. Consistent with our previous results, we found that macrophages from these individuals are resistant to infection with NSI and SI env-pseudotyped viruses, while CD4+ T lymphocytes are resistant to NSI, but not SI, pseudotyped viruses. Overall, our results demonstrate that CD4+ cells from two exposed uninfected individuals resist infection in vitro with primary, macrophage-tropic, NSI isolates of HIV-1, which is the predominant viral phenotype found following HIV-1 transmission. Furthermore, infection with NSI isolates was blocked in both CD4+ T lymphocytes and macrophages from these individuals, suggesting that there may be a common mechanism for resistance in both cell types.
尽管有多次高风险的性接触,但一些个体仍未感染1型人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV-1)。这些个体的CD4+淋巴细胞在体外对某些HIV-1毒株的感染较不敏感,这表明病毒的表型可能会影响其与某些CD4+细胞相互作用的能力。在本研究中,我们检测了两名暴露后未感染个体(EU2和EU3)的CD4+T淋巴细胞和巨噬细胞对一组具有非融合诱导(NSI)或融合诱导(SI)表型的HIV-1生物学克隆分离株感染的易感性。我们的结果表明,EU2和EU3的CD4+T淋巴细胞对HIV-1的NSI分离株感染具有抗性,但对原发性SI分离株感染敏感。此外,我们发现EU2和EU3的巨噬细胞对NSI和SI分离株感染均具有抗性。使用从急性HIV-1感染患者中获得的几种未克隆的NSI和SI分离株证实了后一发现。在进一步的实验中,编码NSI或SI病毒特征性糖蛋白的env克隆用于单循环感染性测定,以评估EU2和EU3的CD4+淋巴细胞和巨噬细胞的感染情况。与我们之前的结果一致,我们发现这些个体的巨噬细胞对NSI和SI env假型病毒感染具有抗性,而CD4+T淋巴细胞对NSI假型病毒具有抗性,但对SI假型病毒不具有抗性。总体而言,我们的结果表明,两名暴露后未感染个体的CD4+细胞在体外对原发性、巨噬细胞嗜性的HIV-1 NSI分离株感染具有抗性,这是HIV-1传播后发现的主要病毒表型。此外,这些个体的CD4+T淋巴细胞和巨噬细胞对NSI分离株的感染均被阻断,这表明两种细胞类型中可能存在共同的抗性机制。