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Quantitative Comparison of HTLV-1 and HIV-1 Cell-to-Cell Infection with New Replication Dependent Vectors

  1. Author:
    Mazurov, D.
    Ilinskaya, A.
    Heidecker, G.
    Lloyd, P.
    Derse, D.
  2. Author Address

    [Mazurov, Dmitriy] NCI, HIV Drug Resistance Program, Frederick, MD 21701 USA. NCI, SAIC Frederick, Frederick, MD 21701 USA.;Mazurov, D, NCI, HIV Drug Resistance Program, Frederick, MD 21701 USA.;dvmazurov@yandex.ru
    1. Year: 2010
    2. Date: Feb
  1. Journal: Plos Pathogens
    1. 6
    2. 2
    3. Pages: 11
  2. Type of Article: Article
  3. Article Number: e1000788
  4. ISSN: 1553-7366
  1. Abstract:

    We have developed an efficient method to quantify cell-to-cell infection with single-cycle, replication dependent reporter vectors. This system was used to examine the mechanisms of infection with HTLV-1 and HIV-1 vectors in lymphocyte cell lines. Effector cells transfected with reporter vector, packaging vector, and Env expression plasmid produced virus-like particles that transduced reporter gene activity into cocultured target cells with zero background. Reporter gene expression was detected exclusively in target cells and required an Env-expression plasmid and a viral packaging vector, which provided essential structural and enzymatic proteins for virus replication. Cell-cell fusion did not contribute to infection, as reporter protein was rarely detected in syncytia. Coculture of transfected Jurkat T cells and target Raji/CD4 B cells enhanced HIV-1 infection two fold and HTLV-1 infection ten thousand fold in comparison with cell-free infection of Raji/CD4 cells. Agents that interfere with actin and tubulin polymerization strongly inhibited HTLV-1 and modestly decreased HIV-1 cell-to-cell infection, an indication that cytoskeletal remodeling was more important for HTLV-1 transmission. Time course studies showed that HTLV-1 transmission occurred very rapidly after cell mixing, whereas slower kinetics of HIV-1 coculture infection implies a different mechanism of infectious transmission. HTLV-1 Tax was demonstrated to play an important role in altering cell-cell interactions that enhance virus infection and replication. Interestingly, superantigen-induced synapses between Jurkat cells and Raji/CD4 cells did not enhance infection for either HTLV-1 or HIV-1. In general, the dependence on cell-to-cell infection was determined by the virus, the effector and target cell types, and by the nature of the cell-cell interaction.

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External Sources

  1. DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1000788
  2. WOS: 000275295900038

Library Notes

  1. Fiscal Year: FY2009-2010
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