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B R Cullen 《Cell》1986,46(7):973-982
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CD4+ T lymphocytes of individuals infected with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) exhibit a qualitative defect in their ability to mount memory responses to previously encountered antigens although their responses to mitogens remain normal. T cells responsible for memory responses can be distinguished from naive T cells based on differential expression of isoforms of the tyrosine phosphatase CD45. It has been suggested that memory CD4+ T cells from infected individuals have a greater virus burden than naive CD4+ T cells and that this accounts for the loss of recall responses in infected individuals. However, it has been unclear whether naive and memory T cells are equally susceptible to infection and to the cytopathic effects of the virus. We therefore infected highly purified resting naive and memory CD4+ T cells from HIV-1-seronegative individuals with HIV-1(LAI). Infected cells were then stimulated with phytohemagglutinin to render them permissive for viral replication. Cell viability and growth rate were monitored for 8 to 10 days as indicators of cytopathic effects induced by HIV-1(LAI). Our results indicated that naive and memory CD4+ T cells display marked differences in susceptibility to the cytopathic effects induced by HIV-1(LAI), infection. The cytopathic effects induced by HIV-1(LAI) were much more severe in memory CD4+ T cells than in naive CD4+ T cells. Differential cytopathic effects in naive and memory T cells were not due to differences in virus entry into and replication in these cell populations. Rather, memory cells were more susceptible to cytopathic effects. Pronounced cytopathic effects in memory cells were clearly detectable at 7 day postinfection. Cell death occurred at the single-cell level and was not accompanied by syncytium formation. The growth rate of infected memory CD4+ T cells was also severely compromised compared to that of naive CD4+ T cells, whereas the growth rates of both uninfected naive and memory CD4+ T cells were approximately the same. At least a portion of the dying cells exhibited biochemical changes characteristic of apoptosis. These results suggest that the selective functional defects present in the memory CD4+ T-cell subset of HIV-1-infected individuals may in part be the result of the greater susceptibility of memory T cells to cytopathic effects induced by HIV-1.  相似文献   

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Human T-lymphotropic virus type III (HTLV-III/LAV or HIV) contains a gene designated art (anti-repressor transactivator). Here, we report the expression of the art gene product in bacteria and show that the 20-kilodalton (kDa) bacterially expressed art protein is recognized by serum of a patient. The bacterially synthesized art protein competed in an immunological reaction with a 20-kDa protein produced in HTLV-III/LAV-infected lymphocytes. Antiserum to a synthetic oligopeptide corresponding to a sequence in the second exon of the art gene also precipitated the 20-kDa protein in HTLV-III/LAV-infected cells. These results demonstrate that the 20-kDa art gene product is expressed in cell lines that produce HTLV-III/LAV virions.  相似文献   

5.
In vitro studies indicate that human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infections are cytopathic for T4+ peripheral blood lymphocytes and for most continuous lines of T4+ lymphocytes. These cytopathic effects have been largely attributed to the formation of syncytia by HIV-infected cells. We report that HIV infections killed cultured peripheral blood lymphocytes and a line of T4+-lymphoid cells (CEM cells) without causing cell fusion. We also report that the occurrence of syncytia is an early and transitory phenomenon following infection of a fusion-susceptible line of T4+-cells (H9 cells). Mixing experiments and flow cytometry have been used to demonstrate that susceptibility to HIV-induced fusion is not determined by differences in presentation of viral envelope antigens or the surface levels of T4 receptor antigens on fusion-susceptible and -resistant cells. We conclude that a major mechanism of HIV-induced cell killing does not involve cell fusion and that HIV-induced cell fusion, when it does occur, requires factors in addition to viral envelope antigens and host T4 receptors.  相似文献   

6.
The human T-cell lymphotropic virus type III (HTLV-III/LAV) is a retrovirus associated with acquired immune deficiency syndrome. The region on the viral genome that is necessary for trans-activation of the HTLV-III/LAV long terminal repeat called tatIII has previously been determined to lie between nucleotides 5365 and 5607. Here we report that a bacterial fusion protein containing amino acid sequences specified by the first coding exon of the tatIII gene is recognized by some patient antisera. We also demonstrate that lymphoid and epithelial cells that express the trans activator function express a 14-kilodalton (kDa) protein recognized by a patient antiserum that reacts with the bacterial tatIII fusion protein. Cells transiently transfected with a deletion mutant of the trans activator protein produce a 12-kDa protein rather than the 14-kDa protein. These observations indicate that the tatIII region contains a functional gene and is capable of expressing a protein that migrates with an apparent molecular size of 14 kDa in some lymphoid and epithelial cells transfected with plasmids containing the tatIII region. We propose that the product of the trans activator gene be designated p14tat-III.  相似文献   

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The viral infectivity factor gene vif of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 has been shown to affect the infectivity but not the production of virus particles. In this study, the effect of vif in the context of the HXB2 virus on virus replication in several CD4+ T-cell lines was investigated. vif was found to be required for replication in the CD4+ T-cell lines CEM and H9 as well as in peripheral blood T lymphocytes. vif was not required for replication in the SupT1, C8166, and Jurkat T-cell lines. The infectivity of vif-defective viruses depended on the cell type in which the virus was produced. In CEM cells, vif was required for production of virus capable of initiating infection in all cell lines studied. vif-defective virus produced by SupT1, C8166, and Jurkat cells and the monkey cell line COS-1 could initiate infection in multiple cell lines, including CEM and H9. These results suggest that vif can compensate for cellular factors required for production of infectious virus particles that are present in some cell lines such as SupT1, C8166, and Jurkat but are absent in others such as CEM and H9 as well as peripheral blood T lymphocytes. The effect of vif was not altered by deletion of the carboxyl terminus of gp41, a proposed target for vif (B. Guy, M. Geist, K. Dott, D. Spehner, M.-P. Kieny, and J.-P. Lecocq, J. Virol. 65:1325-1331, 1991). These studies demonstrate that vif enhances viral infectivity during virus production and also suggest that vif is likely to be important for natural infections.  相似文献   

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One approach to gene therapy for AIDS is to block the replication of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) by inhibiting that tat gene, whose product activates the expression of all HIV-1 genes. To accomplish this, we constructed an antitat gene expressing an RNA with dual (polymeric TAR and antisense-tat) function in an attempt to both sequester Tat protein and block its translation from mRNA. A minigene consisting of the antitat gene driven by the HIV-1 long terminal repeat was inserted into a double-copy retrovirus vector, such that antitat expression would be upregulated only in HIV-1-infected cells. After transduction of a T-lymphocytic cell line (Molt-3) the antitat gene inhibited HIV-1 replication. This inhibition was inversely correlated with the virus infections dose. Virus replication was also inhibited for 5 months in two different T-cell lines after they had been infected at a high multiplicity of infection, suggesting that the antitat gene may be effective over long periods. Importantly, antitat blocked the replication and the cytopathic effect of HIV-1 in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells and led to as much as 4,000-fold inhibition of the replication of an HIV-1 field isolate as well as HIV-1 prototypes maintained in culture. These results suggest that antitat gene therapy has potential use for blocking HIV-1 replication in infected individuals.  相似文献   

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Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) is commonly found in the brains of patients with AIDS and in some cases can be detected in the same cells as can human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). In this study, we analyzed the patterns of replication of HIV-1 and HCMV in singly infected cells and the effects of dual infection in human brain-derived cell lines of three different origins: neuroblastoma cell lines SK-N-MC and SY5Y; astrocytoma/glioblastoma cell lines U373-MG and Hs 683; and undifferentiated glioblastoma cell lines A172 and T98G. To bypass the restriction at the adsorption/penetration step in these CD4-negative cells, we used HIV-1 (amphotropic retrovirus) pseudotypes. These HIV-1 pseudotypes infected the majority of the cells in the cultures and expressed high levels of HIV-1 gene products in all except the SY5Y cells. The cell lines differed in the ability to support HCMV infection, but coinfection with HIV-1 had no effect on HCMV replication. The A172 cells were completely nonpermissive for HCMV gene expression, while HCMV replication in the singly infected T98G and SK-N-MC cell lines was restricted at the level of some early gene products. This resulted in complete and partial inhibition, respectively, of viral DNA synthesis. Dual infection of the A172, T98G, and SK-N-MC cells had no effect on HIV-1 replication. The other three cell lines, U373-MG, Hs 683, and SY5Y, were fully permissive for HCMV replication. In the U373-MG and Hs 683 cells, HCMV markedly inhibited the synthesis of HIV-1 gene products. In contrast, a transient stimulation of HIV-1 production followed by a repression was observed in the dually infected SY5Y cells. We conclude from these results that under conditions in which both HIV-1 and HCMV can undergo fully permissive infection, HCMV can repress HIV-1 gene expression. In cells in which HCMV replication is limited but HIV-1 replicates well, there is no effect on HIV-1 gene expression. However, activation of HIV-1, at least transiently, may occur in cells in which HIV-1 gene expression is limited. These studies suggest that a threshold level of some HIV-1 gene product(s) may obscure activation or promote repression of HIV replication by HCMV.  相似文献   

14.
Two interleukin-2-dependent feline CD4-positive and CD8-negative cell lines, MYA-1 and the newly established FeL-039, were used as host cells for infection with feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV). All FIV strains used, the Petaluma strain and several new isolates, were highly cytopathic to MYA-1. In contrast, the kinetics of FIV replication in FeL-039 differed greatly depending on the strain tested, i.e., noninfectious strain, highly cytopathic strain, and less cytopathic strain producing a persistent state for a long period. It appears, therefore, that cell tropism for FIV differed with each FIV strain tested even in T-cell lines showing similar cell surface phenotypes. Cytopathicity of FIV is evidently due to both the FIV strain and the host T cell.  相似文献   

15.
Rhopalosiphum padi virus (RhPV) (family Dicistroviridae; genus Cripavirus) is an icosahedral aphid virus with a 10kb positive-sense RNA genome. To study the molecular biology of RhPV, identification of a cell line that supports replication of the virus is essential. We screened nine cell lines derived from species within the Lepidoptera, Diptera and Hemiptera for susceptibility to RhPV following RNA transfection. We observed cytopathic effects (CPE) only in cell lines derived from hemipterans, specifically GWSS-Z10 cells derived from the glassy winged sharp shooter, Homalodisca coagulata and DMII-AM cells derived from the corn leaf hopper, Dalbulus maidis. Translation and appropriate processing of viral gene products, RNA replication and packaging of virus particles in the cytoplasm of GWSS-Z10 cells were examined by Western blot analysis, Northern blot hybridization and electron microscopy. Infectivity of the GWSS-Z10 cell derived-virus particles to the bird cherry-oat aphid, R. padi, was confirmed by RT-PCR and Western blot. The GWSS-Z10 cell line provides a valuable tool to investigate replication, structure and assembly of RhPV.  相似文献   

16.
Neuroattenuated variants of mouse hepatitis virus type 4 (MHV-4) selected for resistance to neutralizing monoclonal antibodies (R.G. Dalziel, P.W. Lampert, P. J. Talbot, and M. J. Buchmeier, J. Virol. 59:463-471, 1986) were found to harbor large deletions in both mRNA 3 and its protein product, the 180-kilodalton viron spike (S) glycoprotein. By using antipeptide antibodies directed against selected portions of the chain, deletions were mapped to the middle of the amino-terminal S1 fragment, one of the two posttranslational cleavage products of S, and involved omission of 15 kilodaltons of protein. Deletion mutants could be selected only after multiple passage of virus through cultured cell lines; minimally passaged MHV-4 stocks contained putative point mutants selectable by neutralizing monoclonal antibodies but no deletions. Enhanced growth of deletion mutants relative to wild-type virus was observed in four cell lines used for virus propagation and was attributed to delayed and diminished cytopathic effects that allowed cultures to support virus production for prolonged periods. This hypothesis was reinforced by the finding that no selective advantage for the deletion mutants was observed in two cell lines resistant to virus-induced cytopathic effects. These results indicate that the passaging of MHV-4 in culture generates heterogeneity in S structure and eventually selects for rare neutralization-resistant deletion mutants with decreased virulence properties.  相似文献   

17.
The clone TA10 is a T3+ T4+ T8- proliferative and cytolytic human T cell clone. This clone has been shown to be specific for the hemagglutinin of influenza A Texas virus and restricted by an HLA class II molecule associated with the DRw8-Dw8.1 phenotype. Here we show that TA10 and all of its subclones can also react with eight HLA-DRw8 negative, Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-transformed cell lines or phytohemagglutinin blasts in the absence of influenza antigens. All of these cell lines are HLA-DR2/DR4 with a classic DR2 long haplotype. The only nonreactive HLA-DR2/DR4 cell line observed bears a DR2 short haplotype. Only heterozygous HLA-DR2/DR4 but not parental DR2 or DR4 EBV-transformed cell lines can be recognized by TA10, indicating that the cross-reacting determinant is a transcomplementation product between HLA-DR2 and HLA-DR4 haplotypes. DR-specific, but not DQ- or DP-specific monoclonal antibodies, inhibit in the proliferation assay and in the chromium release test both the DRw8-Dw8.1-restricted and the anti-DR2/DR4 reactions. These results show that HLA-DR-restricted, anti-viral human T cell clone can evidence cross-reactivity for allospecific class II molecules of the major histocompatibility complex, and human CTL can recognize transcomplementation products of class II HLA genes. In addition, the results suggest that a beta-chain coded for by an HLA-DR gene and associated with an alpha-chain coded for by a still unidentified but possibly HLA-DQ gene constitute this functional transcomplementation product.  相似文献   

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R E Bellas  N Hopkins    Y Li 《Journal of virology》1993,67(5):2908-2913
We demonstrate here that the nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-kappa B) binding site in the simian immunodeficiency virus (SIVmac) long terminal repeat is essential for efficient virus replication in primary alveolar macrophages but dispensable for efficient replication in primary T cells. Mutation of the NF-kappa B site does not seriously impair replication of a T-cell-tropic SIVmac239 or a macrophagetropic SIVmacEm* in peripheral blood lymphocytes or established CD4+ cell lines; however, mutation of the NF-kappa B site prevents efficient SIVmacEm* replication in primary alveolar macrophages. These data suggest that efficient replication in primary macrophages requires both envelope and long terminal repeat determinants.  相似文献   

20.
R Duff  F Rapp 《Journal of virology》1975,15(3):490-496
The interaction of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) and type 2 (HSV-2) with Swiss/3T3 cells was investigated. Virus-induced cytopathic effects developed in the absence of production of infectious virus. HSV-2 inactivated with UV light (2, 4, 6, and 8 min) also induced cell death in the absence of virus replication. Cell death was not detectable after infection by HSV-2 that had been inactivated by UV irradiation for 10, 12, and 14 min. 3T3 cells infected with UV-inactivated virus (10 and 12 min) continued to replicate past the contact-inhibited monolayer normally associated with these cells. Infection of 3T3 cells with UV-irradiated USV-2 also induced the development of transformed foci. Transformed cells with an epithelioid of fibroblastoid morphology were identified and isolated. All HSV-2-transformed cell lines contained HSV-2-specific antigens detectable by immunofluorescence techniques. The maximum frequency of HSV-2-induced transformation was 3 times 105 PFU per transformed focus, and the observed transformation could be inhibited by pretreatment of the virus with specific antiserum. No type C particles were detected within five cell culture passages after transformation by HSV-2. Type C virus particles were detected after 10 cell culture passages of the HSV-2-transformed cell lines.  相似文献   

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