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Macrophages infected with HIV-1 produce high levels of M-CSF and macrophage-inflammatory protein-1alpha (MIP-1alpha). M-CSF facilitates the growth and differentiation of macrophages, while the chemotactic properties of MIP-1alpha attract both T lymphocytes and macrophages to the site of HIV infection. Studies described in this work indicate M-CSF may function in an autocrine/paracrine manner to sustain HIV replication, and data suggest possible therapeutic strategies for decreasing viral load following HIV infection. We show that macrophage infection with measles virus or respiratory syncytial virus, in contrast to HIV-1, results in production of MIP-1alpha, but not M-CSF. Thus, M-CSF appears to be specifically produced upon infection of macrophages with HIV-1. Furthermore, addition of M-CSF antagonists to HIV-1-infected macrophages, including anti-M-CSF monoclonal or polyclonal Abs or soluble M-CSF receptors, dramatically inhibited HIV-1 replication and reduced production of MIP-1alpha. Our results suggest that biologic antagonists for M-CSF may represent novel strategies for inhibiting the spread of HIV-1 by 1) blocking virus replication in macrophages, 2) reducing recruitment of HIV-susceptible T cells and macrophages by MIP-1alpha, and 3) preventing the establishment and maintenance of infected macrophages as a reservoir for HIV.  相似文献   

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The susceptibility of monocyte-derived cultured dendritic cells (DCs) to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and their role in viral transmission in the immune response were studied in detail. We observed that highly purified cultured DCs were infected with the T-tropic Lai strain of HIV type 1 (HIV-1Lai) via the CD4 receptor, and this was followed by formation of the complete provirus as detected by PCR. HIV mRNAs were transcribed at only low levels, and virus production was undectable; however, the addition of the purified protein derivative antigen of tuberculin and of autologous resting T cells to HIV-1Lai-infected DCs but not to HIV-1Lai-infected macrophages led to massive HIV transmission and production. These data suggest that the interaction of infected DCs with T cells during the normal immune response could play an important role in the activation and expansion of HIV.  相似文献   

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HIV-1 is dual-tropic for CD4+ T lymphocytes and macrophages, but virus production in the macrophages becomes manifest only during late-stage infection, after CD4+ T cell functions are lost, and when opportunistic pathogens begin to flourish. In this study, the SHIV/macaque model of HIV pathogenesis was used to assess the role of cytokines in regulating virus replication in the two cell types. We injected complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA) intradermally into SHIV(KU)-infected macaques, and infused Schistosoma mansoni eggs into the liver and lungs of others. Tissues examined from these animals demonstrated that macrophages induced by CFA did not support viral replication while those induced by S. mansoni eggs had evidence of productive infection. RT-PCR analysis showed that both Th1 (IL-2 and IFN-gamma) and Th2 cytokines (IL-4 and IL-10) were present in the CFA lesions but only the Th2 cytokines were found in the S. mansoni lesions. Follow-up studies in macaque cell cultures showed that whereas IFN-gamma caused enhancement of virus replication in CD4+ T cells, it curtailed viral replication in infected macrophages. In contrast, IL-4 enhanced viral replication in infected macrophages. These studies strongly suggest that cytokines regulate the sequential phases of HIV replication in CD4 T cells and macrophages.  相似文献   

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Worldwide, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is transmitted predominantly by heterosexual contact. Here, we investigate for the first time, by examining mononuclear cells obtained from cervicovaginal tissue, the mechanisms whereby HIV type 1 (HIV-1) directly targets cells from the human genital tract. In contrast to earlier findings in mucosal models such as human skin, we demonstrate that the majority of T cells and macrophages but none or few dendritic cells (DC) express the HIV-1 coreceptor CCR5 in normal human cervicovaginal mucosa, whereas all three cell types express the coreceptor CXCR4. To understand the role of coreceptor expression on infectivity, mucosal mononuclear cells were infected with various HIV-1 isolates, using either CCR5 or CXCR4. Unstimulated T cells become rapidly, albeit nonproductively, infected with R5- and X4-tropic variants. However, DC and T cells form stable conjugates which permit productive infection by viruses of both coreceptor specificities. These results indicate that HIV-1 can exploit T-cell-DC synergism in the human genital tract to overcome potential coreceptor restrictions on DC and postentry blocks of viral replication in unactivated T cells. Thus, mononuclear cells infiltrating the genital mucosa are permissive for transmission of both R5- and X4-tropic HIV-1 variants, and selection of virus variants does not occur by differential expression of HIV-1 coreceptors on genital mononuclear cells.  相似文献   

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Monocyte-derived dendritic cells (MDDCs) play a key role in the regulation of the immune system and are the target of numerous gene therapy applications. The genetic modification of MDDCs is possible with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-derived lentiviral vectors (LVs) but requires high viral doses to bypass their natural resistance to viral infection, and this in turn affects their physiological properties. To date, a single viral protein is able to counter this restrictive phenotype, Vpx, a protein derived from members of the HIV-2/simian immunodeficiency virus SM lineage that counters at least two restriction factors present in myeloid cells. By tagging Vpx with a short heterologous membrane-targeting domain, we have obtained HIV-1 LVs incorporating high levels of this protein (HIV-1-Src-Vpx). These vectors efficiently transduce differentiated MDDCs and monocytes either as previously purified populations or as populations within unsorted peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). In addition, these vectors can be efficiently pseudotyped with receptor-specific envelopes, further restricting their cellular tropism almost uniquely to MDDCs. Compared to conventional HIV-1 LVs, these novel vectors allow for an efficient genetic modification of MDDCs and, more importantly, do not cause their maturation or affect their survival, which are unwanted side effects of the transduction process. This study describes HIV-1-Src-Vpx LVs as a novel potent tool for the genetic modification of differentiated MDDCs and of circulating monocyte precursors with strong potential for a wide range of gene therapy applications.  相似文献   

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D N Levy  Y Refaeli    D B Weiner 《Journal of virology》1995,69(2):1243-1252
The vpr gene product of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and simian immunodeficiency virus is a virion-associated regulatory protein that has been shown using vpr mutant viruses to increase virus replication, particularly in monocytes/macrophages. We have previously shown that vpr can directly inhibit cell proliferation and induce cell differentiation, events linked to the control of HIV replication, and also that the replication of a vpr mutant but not that of wild-type HIV type 1 (HIV-1) was compatible with cellular proliferation (D. N. Levy, L. S. Fernandes, W. V. Williams, and D. B. Weiner, Cell 72:541-550, 1993). Here we show that purified recombinant Vpr protein, in concentrations of < 100 pg/ml to 100 ng/ml, increases wild-type HIV-1 replication in newly infected transformed cell lines via a long-lasting increase in cellular permissiveness to HIV replication. The activity of extracellular Vpr protein could be completely inhibited by anti-Vpr antibodies. Extracellular Vpr also induced efficient HIV-1 replication in newly infected resting peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Extracellular Vpr transcomplemented a vpr mutant virus which was deficient in replication in promonocytic cells, restoring full replication competence. In addition, extracellular Vpr reactivated HIV-1 expression in five latently infected cell lines of T-cell, B-cell, and promonocytic origin which normally express very low levels of HIV RNA and protein, indicating an activation of translational or pretranslational events in the virus life cycle. Together, these results describe a novel pathway governing HIV replication and a potential target for the development of anti-HIV therapeutics.  相似文献   

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Studies conducted in cell lines indicate that cyclophilin A (CypA) is a component of HIV type 1 (HIV-1) virions, and that when CypA incorporation into virions is inhibited by treatment of infected cells with the immunosuppressive agent cyclosporin A (CsA), HIV-1 infection also is inhibited. Because HIV-1 particles assemble along a different pathway and incorporate different host proteins in macrophages than in other cell types, we investigated CypA and CsA activities in HIV-1-infected primary human macrophages, compared with primary human lymphocytes. We tested virus protein production, virion composition and infectivity, and progress through the virus life cycle under perturbation by drug treatment or mutagenesis in infected cells from multiple donors. Our findings from both primary cell types are different from that previously reported in transformed cells and show that the amount of CypA incorporated into virions is variable and that CsA inhibits HIV-1 infection at both early and late phases of virus replication, the stage affected is determined by the sequence of HIV-1 Gag. Because the cell type infected determines the identity of host proteins active in HIV-1 replication and can influence the activity of some viral inhibitors, infection of transformed cells may not recapitulate infection of the native targets of HIV-1.  相似文献   

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P Lewis  M Hensel    M Emerman 《The EMBO journal》1992,11(8):3053-3058
Cell proliferation is necessary for proviral integration and productive infection of most retroviruses. Nevertheless, the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) can infect non-dividing macrophages. This ability to grow in non-dividing cells is not specific to macrophages because, as we show here, CD4+ HeLa cells arrested at stage G2 of the cell cycle can be infected by HIV-1. Proliferation is necessary for these same cells to be infected by a murine retrovirus, MuLV. HIV-1 integrates into the arrested cell DNA and produces viral RNA and protein in a pattern similar to that in normal cells. In addition, our data suggest that the ability to infect non-dividing cells is due to one of the HIV-1 core virion proteins. HIV infection of non-dividing cells distinguishes lentiviruses from other retroviruses and is likely to be important in the natural history of HIV infection.  相似文献   

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A growing body of evidence indicates that proviral DNA load quantitation is an important parameter in establishing the dynamics of HIV infection. Proviral DNA load can be determined during the follow-up of infected individuals to evaluate reservoir status in addition to viral replication. Hence, the study of viral reservoirs, represented by HIV-1 latently infected cells, including resting memory CD4+ T cells, monocytes and macrophages, by which HIV-1 can be reactivated, opens new perspectives in the assessment and the comprehension of HIV-1 infection. However, the identification of viral reservoirs, that can store both wild and drug resistance viruses, is one of the most important steps in developing treatment strategies because it is now clear that viral reservoirs not only prevent sterilizing immunity but also represent a major obstacle to curing the infection with the potent antiretroviral drugs currently in use. Even if only careful evaluation of virological and immunological markers is necessary to fully characterize the course of HIV-1 infection and to provide a more complete laboratory-based assessment of disease progression, the availability of a new standardized assay such as DNA proviral load will be important to assess the true extent of virological suppression in treated patients and to verify the efficacy of new immune-based therapies aimed at purging HIV-1 DNA reservoirs. Several studies demonstrate, in fact, that HIV-1 cellular DNA load may be an indicator of spread of infection whereas the plasma RNA load is indicates active infection. This article will review the importance of monitoring HIV-1 proviral load DNA during the follow-up of HIV-1 infected subjects, suggesting that additional information complementing HIV RNA load could provide crucial information to monitor viral replication and the effectiveness of HAART therapy.  相似文献   

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