McCarthy M, He J, Wood C
Department of Neurology, Miami Veterans Administration Medical Center and University of Miami School of Medicine, Florida 33125, USA.
J Neurovirol. 1998 Feb;4(1):80-9. doi: 10.3109/13550289809113484.
Qualitative differences among strains of Human Immunodeficiency Virus type 1 (HIV-1) may influence viral infectivity for cells of the central nervous system (CNS) and determine or at least significantly influence the neuropathogenesis of brain infection. In this study, we compared infectivity for these cells in vitro among several different laboratory-adapted HIV-1 strains differing in cellular tropism. These strains included three lymphotropic strains (SF2, NL4-3, and SG3.1), two macrophage-tropic strains (SF128A, SF162), and one brain-derived strain (YU2). In microglia, macrophage-tropic strain SF128A established productive infection while the lymphotropic strain SF2 did not. In infected astrocytes, all HIV-1 strains transiently produced variable and much lower levels of p24 antigen. Viral DNA env or tat gene sequences were amplified from infected astrocytes; the amplified signals varied among HIV-1 strains, but the strongest viral DNA signals were obtained from cells infected by the lymphotropic strains SF2 and SG3.1. Transfection of astrocytes with infectious HIV-1 proviral DNA clones confirmed the observation that HIV-1 strains differ in their ability to replicate in astrocytes. Transfection revealed post-entry blocks to replication by macrophage-tropic proviruses pSF128A and pSF162. However, cytomegalovirus (CMV) superinfection of transfected astrocytes enhanced p24 production by lymphotropic HIV-1 proviruses twofold and stimulated p24 production by the otherwise inactive macrophage-tropic proviruses. This study demonstrates the spectrum of HIV-1 strain-associated variation in infectivity for neuroglia, and suggests, in addition, that herpesviral factors or viral-induced cellular factors may stimulate HIV-1 infection in astrocytes and expand the neural cell tropism of certain HIV-1 strains.
1型人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV-1)不同毒株之间的质量差异可能会影响其对中枢神经系统(CNS)细胞的病毒感染性,并决定或至少显著影响脑部感染的神经发病机制。在本研究中,我们比较了几种不同的实验室适应型HIV-1毒株在体外对这些细胞的感染性,这些毒株在细胞嗜性方面存在差异。这些毒株包括三种亲淋巴细胞毒株(SF2、NL4-3和SG3.1)、两种亲巨噬细胞毒株(SF128A、SF162)和一种源自脑部的毒株(YU2)。在小胶质细胞中,亲巨噬细胞毒株SF128A建立了有效感染,而亲淋巴细胞毒株SF2则没有。在受感染的星形胶质细胞中,所有HIV-1毒株均短暂产生了水平各异且低得多的p24抗原。从受感染的星形胶质细胞中扩增出病毒DNA env或tat基因序列;扩增信号在HIV-1毒株之间有所不同,但最强的病毒DNA信号来自受亲淋巴细胞毒株SF2和SG3.1感染的细胞。用感染性HIV-1前病毒DNA克隆转染星形胶质细胞证实了HIV-1毒株在星形胶质细胞中复制能力存在差异这一观察结果。转染揭示了亲巨噬细胞前病毒pSF128A和pSF162在进入后存在复制障碍。然而,转染的星形胶质细胞受到巨细胞病毒(CMV)的超感染使亲淋巴细胞HIV-1前病毒的p24产量提高了两倍,并刺激了原本无活性的亲巨噬细胞前病毒产生p24。本研究证明了HIV-1毒株在对神经胶质细胞感染性方面存在的一系列相关变异,此外还表明疱疹病毒因子或病毒诱导的细胞因子可能会刺激星形胶质细胞中的HIV-1感染,并扩大某些HIV-1毒株的神经细胞嗜性。