Kozak S L, Platt E J, Madani N, Ferro F E, Peden K, Kabat D
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland 97201-3098, USA.
J Virol. 1997 Feb;71(2):873-82. doi: 10.1128/JVI.71.2.873-882.1997.
We have used a focal infectivity method to quantitatively analyze the CD4, CXCR-4, and CCR-5 dependencies for infections by diverse primary patient (PR) and laboratory-adapted (LA) isolates of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). Infectivities of T-cell-tropic viruses were analyzed in a panel of HeLa-CD4 cell clones that have distinct quantities of CD4 and in human astroglioma U87MG-CD4 cells that express a large quantity of CD4 and become highly susceptible to infection after transfection with a CXCR-4 expression vector. The latter analysis indicated that PR as well as LA T-cell-tropic viruses efficiently employ CXCR-4 as a coreceptor in an optimal human cell line that contains abundant CD4. Previous uncertainties regarding coreceptor usage by PR T-cell-tropic HIV-1 isolates may therefore have derived from the assay conditions. As reported previously, unrelated LA and PR T-cell-tropic HIV-1 isolates differ in infectivities for the HeLa-CD4 clonal panel, with LA viruses infecting all clones equally and PR viruses infecting the clones in proportion to cellular CD4 quantities (D. Kabat, S. L. Kozak, K. Wherly, and B. Chesebro, J. Virol. 68:2570-2577, 1994). To analyze the basis for this difference, we used the HeLa-CD4 panel to compare a molecularly cloned T-cell-tropic PR virus (ELI1) with six of its variants that grow to different extents in CD4-positive leukemic cell lines and that differ only at specific positions in their gp120 and gp41 envelope glycoproteins. All mutations in gp120 or gp41 that contributed to laboratory adaptation preferentially enhanced infectivity for cells that had little CD4 and thereby decreased the CD4 dependencies of the infections. There was a close correlation between abilities of T-cell-tropic ELI viruses to grow in an expanded repertoire of leukemic cell lines, the reduced CD4 dependencies of their infections of the HeLa-CD4 panel, and their sensitivities to inactivation by soluble CD4 (sCD4). Since all of the ELI viruses can efficiently use CXCR-4 as a coreceptor, we conclude that an increase in viral affinity for CD4 rather than a switch in coreceptor specificity is principally responsible for laboratory adaption of T-cell-tropic HIV-1. Syncytium-inducing activities of the ELI viruses, especially when analyzed on cells with low amounts of CD4, were also highly correlated with their laboratory-adapted properties. Results with macrophage-tropic HIV-1 were strikingly different in both coreceptor and CD4 dependencies. When assayed in HeLa-CD4 cells transfected with an expression vector for CCR-5, macrophage-tropic HIV-1 isolates that had been molecularly cloned shortly after removal from patients were equally infectious for cells that had low or high CD4 quantities. Moreover, despite their substantial infectivities for cells that had only a trace of CD4, macrophage-tropic isolates were relatively resistant to inactivation by sCD4. We conclude that T-cell-tropic PR viruses bind weakly to CD4 and preferentially infect cells that coexpress CXCR-4 and large amounts of CD4. Their laboratory adaptation involves corresponding increases in affinities for CD4 and in abilities to infect cells that have relatively little CD4. In contrast, macrophage-tropic HIV-1 appears to interact weakly with CD4 although it can infect cells that coexpress CCR-5 and small quantities of CD4. We propose that cooperative binding of macrophage-tropic HIV-1 onto CCR-5 and CD4 may enhance virus adsorption and infectivity for cells that have only a trace of CD4.
我们采用了一种局部感染性方法,对多种原发性患者来源(PR)和实验室适应性(LA)的1型人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV-1)毒株感染时对CD4、CXCR-4和CCR-5的依赖性进行了定量分析。在一组具有不同CD4数量的HeLa-CD4细胞克隆以及表达大量CD4且在转染CXCR-4表达载体后对感染高度敏感的人星形胶质瘤U87MG-CD4细胞中,分析了嗜T细胞病毒的感染性。后一项分析表明,PR以及LA嗜T细胞病毒在含有丰富CD4的最佳人类细胞系中有效地将CXCR-4用作共受体。因此,先前关于PR嗜T细胞HIV-1分离株共受体使用情况的不确定性可能源于检测条件。如先前报道,无关的LA和PR嗜T细胞HIV-1分离株对HeLa-CD4克隆组的感染性不同,LA病毒对所有克隆的感染程度相同,而PR病毒对克隆的感染程度与细胞CD4数量成比例(D. Kabat、S. L. Kozak、K. Wherly和B. Chesebro,J. Virol. 68:2570 - 2577,1994)。为了分析这种差异的基础,我们使用HeLa-CD4组比较了一个分子克隆的嗜T细胞PR病毒(ELI1)与其六个变体,这些变体在CD4阳性白血病细胞系中的生长程度不同,并且仅在其gp120和gp41包膜糖蛋白的特定位置存在差异。gp120或gp41中所有导致实验室适应性的突变优先增强了对CD4含量低的细胞的感染性,从而降低了感染对CD4的依赖性。嗜T细胞ELI病毒在扩展的白血病细胞系库中生长的能力、它们对HeLa-CD4组感染的CD4依赖性降低以及它们对可溶性CD4(sCD4)灭活的敏感性之间存在密切相关性。由于所有ELI病毒都能有效地将CXCR-4用作共受体,我们得出结论,病毒对CD4亲和力的增加而非共受体特异性的转换主要负责嗜T细胞HIV-1的实验室适应性。ELI病毒的合胞体诱导活性,特别是在对CD4含量低的细胞进行分析时,也与其实验室适应性特性高度相关。嗜巨噬细胞HIV-1的结果在共受体和CD4依赖性方面都有显著不同。在用CCR-5表达载体转染的HeLa-CD4细胞中进行检测时,从患者体内分离后不久进行分子克隆的嗜巨噬细胞HIV-1分离株对CD4含量低或高的细胞具有相同的感染性。此外,尽管它们对仅含有微量CD4的细胞具有相当的感染性,但嗜巨噬细胞分离株对sCD4灭活相对抗性。我们得出结论,嗜T细胞PR病毒与CD4的结合较弱,优先感染共表达CXCR-4和大量CD4的细胞。它们的实验室适应性涉及对CD4亲和力的相应增加以及感染CD4含量相对较低细胞的能力的增加。相比之下,嗜巨噬细胞HIV-1似乎与CD4的相互作用较弱,尽管它可以感染共表达CCR-5和少量CD4的细胞。我们提出,嗜巨噬细胞HIV-1在CCR-5和CD4上的协同结合可能增强病毒对仅含有微量CD4的细胞的吸附和感染性。