Skip NavigationSkip to Content

Fusion inhibitor prevents spread of immunodeficiency viruses, but not activation of virus-specific T cells, by dendritic cells

  1. Author:
    Frank, I.
    Stossel, H.
    Gettie, A.
    Turville, S. G.
    Bess, J. W.
    Lifson, J. D.
    Sivin, I.
    Romani, N.
    Robbiani, M.
  2. Author Address

    Frank, I.; Turville, S. G.; Sivin, I.; Robbiani, M.] Populat Council, HIV & AIDS Program, Ctr Biomed Res, New York, NY 10065 USA. [Gettie, A.] Aaron Diamond AIDS Res Ctr, New York, NY 10016 USA. [Stoessel, H.; Romani, N.] Innsbruck Med Univ, Dept Dermatol, Innsbruck, Austria. [Bess, J. W., Jr.; Lifson, J. D.] NCI, AIDS Vaccine Program, SAIC Frederick, Frederick, MD 21702 USA.
    1. Year: 2008
  1. Journal: Journal of Virology
    1. 82
    2. 11
    3. Pages: 5329-5339
  2. Type of Article: Article
  1. Abstract:

    Dendritic cells (DCs) play a key role in innate immune responses, and their interactions with T cells are critical for the induction of adaptive immunity. However, immunodeficiency viruses are efficiently captured by DCs and can be transmitted to and amplified in CD4(+) T cells, with potentially deleterious effects on the induction of immune responses. In DC-T-cell cocultures, contact with CD4(+), not CD8(+), T cells preferentially facilitated virus movement to and release at immature and mature DC-T-cell contact sites. This occurred within 5 min of DC-T-cell contact. While the fusion inhibitor T-1249 did not prevent virus capture by DCs or the release of viruses at the DC-T-cell contact points, it readily blocked virus transfer to and amplification in CD4(+) T cells. Higher doses of T-1249 were needed to block the more robust replication driven by mature DCs. Virus accumulated in DCs within T-1249-treated cocultures but these DCs were actually less infectious than DCs isolated from untreated cocultures. Importantly, T-1249 did not interfere with the stimulation of virus-specific CD4(+) and CD8(+) T-cell responses when present during virus-loading of DCs or for the time of the DC-T-cell coculture. These results provide clues to identifying strategies to prevent DC-driven virus amplification in CD4(+) T cells while maintaining virus-specific immunity, an objective critical in the development of microbicides and therapeutic vaccines.

    See More

External Sources

  1. PMID: 18367527

Library Notes

  1. No notes added.
NCI at Frederick

You are leaving a government website.

This external link provides additional information that is consistent with the intended purpose of this site. The government cannot attest to the accuracy of a non-federal site.

Linking to a non-federal site does not constitute an endorsement by this institution or any of its employees of the sponsors or the information and products presented on the site. You will be subject to the destination site's privacy policy when you follow the link.

ContinueCancel