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1.
Highly active antiretroviral therapy has succeeded in many cases in suppressing virus production in patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV); however, once treatment is discontinued, virus replication is rekindled. One reservoir capable of harboring HIV in a latent state and igniting renewed infection once therapy is terminated is a resting T cell. Due to the sparsity of T cells latently infected with HIV in vivo, it has been difficult to study viral and cellular interactions during latency. The SCID-hu (Thy/Liv) mouse model of HIV latency, however, provides high percentages of latently infected cells, allowing a detailed analysis of phenotype. Herein we show that latently infected cells appear phenotypically normal. Following cellular stimulation, the virus completes its life cycle and induces phenotypic changes, such as CD4 and major histocompatibility complex class I down-regulation, in the infected cell. In addition, HIV expression following activation did not correlate with expression of the cellular activation marker CD25. The apparently normal phenotype and lack of HIV expression in latently infected cells could prevent recognition by the immune response and contribute to the long-lived nature of this reservoir.  相似文献   

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Here we demonstrate that a combination of tenofovir, emtricitabine, and raltegravir effectively suppresses peripheral and systemic HIV replication in humanized BLT mice. We also demonstrate that antiretroviral therapy (ART)-treated humanized BLT mice harbor latently infected resting human CD4+ T cells that can be induced ex vivo to produce HIV. We observed that the levels of infected resting human CD4+ T cells present in BLT mice are within the range of those observed circulating in patients undergoing suppressive ART. These results demonstrate the potential of humanized BLT mice as an attractive model for testing the in vivo efficacy of novel HIV eradication strategies.  相似文献   

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Quiescent T lymphocytes containing latent human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) provide a long-lived viral reservoir. This reservoir may be the source of active infection that is reinitiated following the cessation of antiretroviral therapy. Therefore, it is important to understand the mechanisms involved in latent infection to develop new strategies to eliminate the latent HIV reservoir. We have previously demonstrated that latently infected quiescent lymphocytes can be generated during thymopoiesis in vivo in the SCID-hu mouse system. However, there is still a pressing need for an in vitro model of HIV latency in primary human cells. Here, we present a novel in vitro model that recapitulates key aspects of dormant HIV infection. Using an enhanced green fluorescent protein-luciferase fusion protein-containing reporter virus, we have generated a stable infection in primary human CD4(+) CD8(+) thymocytes in the absence of viral gene expression. T-cell activation induces a >200-fold induction of reporter activity. The induced reporter activity originates from a fully reverse-transcribed and integrated genome. We further demonstrate that this model can be useful to study long terminal repeat regulation, as previously characterized NF-kappaB response element mutations decrease the activation of viral gene expression. This model can therefore be used to study intricate molecular aspects of activation-inducible HIV infection in primary cells.  相似文献   

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Maintenance of HIV latency in vitro has been linked to methylation of HIV DNA. However, examinations of the degree of methylation of HIV DNA in the latently infected, resting CD4(+) T cells of infected individuals receiving antiretroviral therapy have been limited. Here, we show that methylation of the HIV 5' long terminal repeat (LTR) in the latent viral reservoir of HIV-infected aviremic individuals receiving therapy is rare, suggesting that other mechanisms are likely involved in the persistence of viral latency.  相似文献   

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Latently infected cells form the major obstacle to HIV eradication. Studies of HIV latency have been generally hindered by the lack of a robust and rapidly deployable cell model that involves primary human CD4 T lymphocytes. Latently infected cell lines have proven useful, but it is unclear how closely these proliferating cells recapitulate the conditions of viral latency in non-dividing CD4 T lymphocytes in vivo. Current primary lymphocyte models more closely reflect the in vivo state of HIV latency, but they are limited by protracted culture periods and often low cell yields. Additionally, these models are always established in a single latently infected cell type that may not reflect the heterogeneous nature of the latent reservoir. Here we describe a rapid, sensitive, and quantitative primary cell model of HIV-1 latency with replication competent proviruses and multiple reporters to enhance the flexibility of the system. In this model, post-integration HIV-1 latency can be established in all populations of CD4 T cells, and reactivation of latent provirus assessed within 7 days. The kinetics and magnitude of reactivation were evaluated after stimulation with various cytokines, small molecules, and T-cell receptor agonists. Reactivation of latent HIV proviruses was readily detected in the presence of strong activators of NF-κB. Latently infected transitional memory CD4 T cells proved more responsive to these T-cell activators than latently infected central memory cells. These findings reveal potentially important biological differences within the latently infected pool of memory CD4 T cells and describe a flexible primary CD4 T-cell system to evaluate novel antagonists of HIV latency.  相似文献   

8.
Regulation of HIV-1 latency by T-cell activation   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Williams SA  Greene WC 《Cytokine》2007,39(1):63-74
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9.
Antiretroviral therapy is currently only capable of controlling HIV replication rather than completely eradicating virus from patients. This is due in part to the establishment of a latent virus reservoir in resting CD4+ T cells, which persists even in the presence of HAART. It is thought that forced activation of latently infected cells could induce virus production, allowing targeting of the cell by the immune response. A variety of molecules are able to stimulate HIV from latency. However no tested purging strategy has proven capable of eliminating the infection completely or preventing viral rebound if therapy is stopped. Hence novel latency activation approaches are required. Nanoparticles can offer several advantages over more traditional drug delivery methods, including improved drug solubility, stability, and the ability to simultaneously target multiple different molecules to particular cell or tissue types. Here we describe the development of a novel lipid nanoparticle with the protein kinase C activator bryostatin-2 incorporated (LNP-Bry). These particles can target and activate primary human CD4+ T-cells and stimulate latent virus production from human T-cell lines in vitro and from latently infected cells in a humanized mouse model ex vivo. This activation was synergistically enhanced by the HDAC inhibitor sodium butyrate. Furthermore, LNP-Bry can also be loaded with the protease inhibitor nelfinavir (LNP-Bry-Nel), producing a particle capable of both activating latent virus and inhibiting viral spread. Taken together these data demonstrate the ability of nanotechnological approaches to provide improved methods for activating latent HIV and provide key proof-of-principle experiments showing how novel delivery systems may enhance future HIV therapy.  相似文献   

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Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) suppresses human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) replication to undetectable levels but cannot fully eradicate the virus because a small reservoir of CD4+ T cells remains latently infected. Since HIV efficiently infects only activated CD4+ T cells and since latent HIV primarily resides in resting CD4+ T cells, it is generally assumed that latency is established when a productively infected cell recycles to a resting state, trapping the virus in a latent state. In this study, we use a dual reporter virus—HIV Duo-Fluo I, which identifies latently infected cells immediately after infection—to investigate how T cell activation affects the estab-lishment of HIV latency. We show that HIV latency can arise from the direct infection of both resting and activated CD4+ T cells. Importantly, returning productively infected cells to a resting state is not associated with a significant silencing of the integrated HIV. We further show that resting CD4+ T cells from human lymphoid tissue (tonsil, spleen) show increased latency after infection when compared to peripheral blood. Our findings raise significant questions regarding the most commonly accepted model for the establishment of latent HIV and suggest that infection of both resting and activated primary CD4+ T cells produce latency.  相似文献   

14.
The Fab' fragment of a monoclonal antibody (mAb) to CD3 and the F(ab')2 fragment of a mAb to human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) gp41 were combined to generate a bifunctional antibody (BFA). The mAb to gp41 (IV1-4G6) has previously been shown to react with a number of HIV-1 strains and T-lymphoblastoid cells (TLBC) armed with the BFA (BFA-TLBC) effectively inhibited HIV-1 in primarily cultured lymphoblasts infected with the clinically isolated virus which was reactive to the mAb. Although BFA-TLBC could not cause cytolysis of 51Cr-labeled latently infected cells (OM-10.1) in 6 hr incubation, cocultivation of OM-10.1 cells with BFA-TLBC for 3 days or more eliminated the latently infected cells making the cells susceptible to BFA-TLBC. Therefore, BFA-TLBC may be beneficial for HIV-infected patients in eradicating latently infected cells which can not be eliminated even with highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART).  相似文献   

15.
Generation of HIV latency during thymopoiesis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
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16.
Latently infected resting CD4+ T cells are the major barrier to curing HIV. We have recently demonstrated that chemokines, which bind to the chemokine receptors CCR7, CXCR3 and CCR6, facilitate efficient HIV nuclear localisation and integration in resting CD4+ T cells, leading to latency. As latently infected cells are enriched in lymphoid tissues, where chemokines are highly concentrated, this may provide a mechanism for the generation of latently infected cells in vivo. Here we review the role of chemokines in HIV persistence; the main signalling pathways that are involved; and how these pathways may be exploited to develop novel strategies to reduce or eliminate latently infected cells.  相似文献   

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The majority of cells infected with the human immunodeficiency virus are activated CD4+ T cells, which can be treated with antiretoviral drugs. However, an obstacle to eradication is the presence of viral reservoirs, such as latently infected CD4+ T cells. Such cells may be less susceptible to antiretroviral drugs and may persist at low levels during treatment. We introduce a model of impulsive differential equations that describe T cell and drug interactions. We make the extreme assumption that latently infected cells are unaffected by drugs, in order to answer the research question: Can the viral reservoir of latently infected cells be eradicated using current antiretroviral therapy? We analyse the model in both the presence and absence of drugs, showing that, if the frequency of drug taking is sufficiently high, then the number of uninfected CD4+ T cells approaches the number of T cells in the uninfected immune system. In particular, this implies that the latent reservoir will be eliminated. It follows that, with sufficient application of drugs, latently infected cells cannot sustain a viral reservoir on their own. We illustrate the results with numerical simulations.  相似文献   

19.
HIV-infected individuals currently cannot be completely cured because existing antiviral therapy regimens do not address HIV provirus DNA, flanked by long terminal repeats (LTRs), already integrated into host genome. Here, we present a possible alternative therapeutic approach to specifically and directly mediate deletion of the integrated full-length HIV provirus from infected and latently infected human T cell genomes by using specially designed zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs) to target a sequence within the LTR that is well conserved across all clades. We designed and screened one pair of ZFN to target the highly conserved HIV-1 5′-LTR and 3′-LTR DNA sequences, named ZFN-LTR. We found that ZFN-LTR can specifically target and cleave the full-length HIV-1 proviral DNA in several infected and latently infected cell types and also HIV-1 infected human primary cells in vitro. We observed that the frequency of excision was 45.9% in infected human cell lines after treatment with ZFN-LTR, without significant host-cell genotoxicity. Taken together, our data demonstrate that a single ZFN-LTR pair can specifically and effectively cleave integrated full-length HIV-1 proviral DNA and mediate antiretroviral activity in infected and latently infected cells, suggesting that this strategy could offer a novel approach to eradicate the HIV-1 virus from the infected host in the future.  相似文献   

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