Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Journal of Virology, September 2005, p. 11151-11160, Vol. 79, No. 17
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.17.11151-11160.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Unit of Virology, Division of Medical Microbiology, Department of Laboratory Medicine, Lund University, Lund, Sweden,1 Laboratory of Cellular and Molecular Biophysics and National Institute of Child Health and Human Development,2 NASA/NIH Center for Three-Dimensional Tissue Culture, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland;,3 Venhälsan, Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden,4 Swedish Institute for Infectious Disease Control and Microbiology and Tumorbiology Center, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden5
Received 23 February 2005/ Accepted 25 May 2005
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
The classification of patients into switch and nonswitch, as well as the monitoring of HIV-1 disease progression, is largely based on analysis of peripheral blood. However, about 98% of CD4+ T cells are located in lymphoid tissues, including gut-associated tissues, where the proportion of HIV-1-infected cells is much higher than in blood (38, 43). Therefore, lymphoid tissue is a major site of HIV-1 infection and is where the critical events of HIV disease occur (39).
In this study, we compared the pathogeneses of sequential primary R5 HIV-1 isolates from switch and nonswitch virus patients in ex vivo lymphoid tissue, which supports productive HIV-1 infection without exogenous stimulation (16). We found that, in human lymphoid tissue, the absolute replicative capacities of isolates are determined by host (tissue) factors, whereas the relative replicative capacities are an intrinsic property of these HIV isolates. Also, the ability of the R5 patients' isolates to deplete CCR5-expressing CD4+ T cells in ex vivo-infected human lymphoid tissue does not depend on the tissue donor but rather is an intrinsic viral property. This ability is more pronounced for R5 HIV-1 isolated from nonswitch virus patients than for virus from switch virus patients and may be relevant to the differential patterns of disease progression in these two groups of infected individuals.
|
|
|---|
The nonswitch virus group contained three patients (435, 1047, and 1838), and two R5 isolates from each patient were studied. These patients all showed signs of disease progression, with declining CD4+ T-cell counts (5.7 x 106, 4.6 x 106, and 2.9 x 106 cells per liter of blood per month, respectively) during the follow-up period. The first clinical symptom appeared in these patients at 99 months, 71 months, and 131 months after infection, respectively (Table 1). The isolates studied were obtained between 41 and 124 months after infection.
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Characteristics of patients and isolates
|
Viruses were isolated from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) according to a standard procedure (46) and were passaged only twice in donor PBMC before coreceptor use of sequential isolates was determined (29). We studied the evolutionary relationship between virus isolates from the same patients using phylogenetic analysis of V3 sequences, as previously described (34). We prepared virus stocks by infecting 6 x 106 to 8 x 106 PBMC, which had been obtained from two healthy donors and activated for 3 days with phytohemagglutinin (2.5 µg/ml; Boule, Stockholm, Sweden), with 1.5 ml of supernatant from patients' infected PBMC in the presence of 2 µg/ml Polybrene (Sigma, Stockholm, Sweden). The cultures were maintained in RPMI (Invitrogen, Lidingö, Sweden) containing 10% fetal bovine serum (Invitrogen, Lidingö, Sweden), 50 U/ml penicillin (Invitrogen, Lidingö, Sweden), 50 U/ml streptomycin (Invitrogen, Lidingö, Sweden), and 10 U/ml interleukin-2 (IL-2; Sigma, Stockholm, Sweden). Supernatants were harvested on day 7 and on day 10 or 11 after infection and stored at 80°C.
HIV infection of human lymphoid tissue ex vivo. Human tonsil tissue removed during routine tonsillectomy and not required for clinical purposes was received within 5 h of excision and was sectioned into 2- to 3-mm blocks. These tissue blocks were placed onto collagen sponge gels in culture medium at the air-liquid interface and infected the next day, as described earlier (16). Five microliters of virus, containing at least 10 ng/ml p24, were applied to the top of each tissue block. We assessed productive HIV infection by measuring p24 in the culture medium using an HIV-1 p24 antigen enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (Beckman-Coulter, Miami, FL); we used the concentration of p24 accumulated in culture medium bathing 27 or 54 tissue blocks in three or six wells during the 3 days between successive medium changes as a measure of virus replication. We terminated the experiments at day 12 to avoid tissue deterioration, which typically starts after 2 weeks and which may affect viral replication, as well as the quality of flow cytometry analysis.
Flow cytometry. Flow cytometry was performed on cells mechanically isolated from control and infected tissue blocks. Lymphocytes were first identified according to their light-scattering properties and then analyzed for expression of lymphocyte markers. For identification of CD3+, CD4+, CD8+, CD25+, CD69+, HLA-DR+, CCR5+, and CXCR4+ cells, cells were stained for surface markers with anti-CD3 fluorescein isothiocyanate or phycoerythrin (PE)-Cy7, anti-CD4 allophycocyanin (APC), anti-CD8 TriColor or APC-Cy7, anti-CD25 PE, or anti-CD69 biotin, followed by neutravidin cascade blue (Molecular Probes, Eugene, Oregon), anti-HLA-DR fluorescein isothiocyanate (Caltag Laboratories, Burlingame, CA), or anti-CD25 APC, anti-CCR5 APC and PECy5, or anti-CXCR4 PE (BD Pharmingen, San Diego, CA), respectively. To identify productively infected cells, we stained cells for surface markers, fixed and permeabilized them with Fix&Perm (Caltag Laboratories), and then stained them with an anti-p24 PE-labeled antibody (KC57; Beckman-Coulter). Data were acquired on a BD LSRII instrument using DIVA software version 3.0 and analyzed with FlowJo software (Tree Star).
Multiplexed fluorescent microsphere immunoassay of human cytokines.
The levels of cytokines (MIP-1
, MIP-1ß, RANTES, MIG, IP-10, tumor necrosis factor alpha, SDF-1, gamma interferon [IFN-
], granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, IL-1
, IL-1ß, IL-2, IL-4, IL-12, IL-15, and IL-16) were evaluated in culture medium by means of a multiplexed fluorescent microsphere immunoassay using the Luminex 100 system (Luminex). Cytokines, capture antibodies, and biotinylated detection antibodies were obtained from R&D Systems. Cytokine capture antibodies were coupled covalently to carboxylate-modified microspheres in a two-step carbodiimide coupling procedure. Binding of biotinylated detection antibodies was ascertained with streptavidin-phycoerythrin (Molecular Probes). Microsphere sets coupled with capture antibodies (1,250 of each specificity) were mixed with 50 µl of standards or culture medium and were incubated overnight at 4°C. Bound cytokines were detected with biotinylated antibodies and streptavidin-phycoerythrin. Data were analyzed with Delta Soft 3 (BioMetallics) using a four-parameter fitting algorithm.
Statistical analysis. We used the Wilcoxon signed rank test to compare the replication capacities of different isolates, the Mann-Whitney test to compare the distributions of activation markers and CD25 in different cell populations, and mixed-model analysis to compare CCR5+ T-cell depletion by R5 isolates from switch and nonswitch patients. For these analyses, we used SPSS 12.0.
|
|
|---|
In this study, we individually infected human lymphoid tissues ex vivo with all the isolates and monitored viral replication, cell loss, and the activation status of productively infected T cells. Out of the above-mentioned 14 isolates tested, 3 caused an unexplainable loss of tissue lymphocytes of various subsets, in sharp contrast with findings reported earlier (21, 41) regarding selective loss of CD4+ T cells in this ex vivo tissue system. We excluded these 3 isolates from further studies, and we report below on the behavior of 11 isolates tested in lymphoid tissue obtained from five donors.
HIV-1 replication in human lymphoid tissue. For tissue inoculation, viruses isolated from a given patient were adjusted to the same concentration of p24. The p24 concentration correlated well with the amount of infectious virus, as determined from 50% tissue culture infective dose titration on PBMC (data not shown). A representative experiment for each HIV-1 isolate is shown in Fig. 1, and the levels of replication by day 12 postinfection in five different tissues are shown in Table 2. Replication of these isolates, as monitored from the release of p24, became evident at day 6 postinfection and continued to increase during the course of the experiment, as reported earlier for other HIV-1 variants (16). The absolute levels of viral replication in tissue samples varied from donor to donor (see also reference 40). Because of the limited amount of material in each tissue sample, systematic comparison of isolates from switch and nonswitch virus patients could not be carried out. However, the replication capacities of isolates from one patient, tested in the same tissue, could be compared. We found, however, that the hierarchy of replication capacities of HIV isolates obtained from any one patient remained constant in lymphoid tissues from various donors. For example, in tissues from all tested donors, isolate 5379 from patient 1838 replicated to a higher level than isolate 8590 from the same patient. Similarly, within tissues from all tested donors, isolate 3700 from patient 2242 replicated to a higher level than isolate 1886 from the same patient. Also, in tissues from all tested donors, the isolates from patient 435 replicated to similar levels, and the same was true for isolates from patients 1047 and 2112.
![]() View larger version (24K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 1. Replication of primary R5 HIV-1 isolates in human lymphoid tissue ex vivo. Shown are the replication kinetics of 11 primary R5 HIV-1 isolates from five different patients in ex vivo-infected human lymphoid tissue. One representative experiment (out of five) is shown for each patient. Indicated are the patient numbers and the isolate numbers. Each point represents the p24 concentration accumulated in pooled medium bathing 27 or 54 tissue blocks (9 blocks per 4-ml well) from a single donor over a period of 3 days between medium changes.
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 2. Virus replication in tissues of five different donors 12 days postinfection
|
, MIP-1ß, RANTES, MIG, IP-10, tumor necrosis factor alpha, SDF-1, IFN-
, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, IL-1
, IL-1-ß, IL-2, IL-4, IL-12, IL-15, and IL-16 in the supernatants of infected and uninfected tissues. There was no difference between the concentrations of any of the cytokines/chemokines in uninfected tissues and in tissues infected with the 11 R5 isolates used in this study (data not shown). IFN-
, IL-2, IL-4, IL-12, and IL-15 concentrations were below detection levels (14, 41, 123, 41, and 5 pg/ml, respectively) in both infected and uninfected samples. Loss of CCR5+ CD4+ T lymphocytes. We evaluated CD4+ T-cell loss by enumerating tissue lymphocytes using flow cytometry. To account for CD4+ downregulation by HIV-1 infection (26, 45), we gated on CD3+ CD8 cells, since the CD3+ CD8 cell subset in uninfected tissue blocks from 16 donors consisted predominantly of CD3+ CD4+ cells (see also reference 23). Infection with the R5 isolates used in this study caused a slight loss (4.1% ± 1.8%; n = 50) of CD3+ CD8 T cells relative to matched uninfected tissues. The natural targets for these viruses, the CCR5+ CD4+ T cells, constituted 4% to 7% of CD3+ CD8 T cells in these tissues, as revealed with flow cytometry (Table 3), and cell loss in this subset (CD3+ CD8 CCR5+) averaged 42.5% ± 3.6% (n = 50) of that in matched uninfected controls (Fig. 2).
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 3. Distributions of cell populations in lymphoid tissues infected with different primary R5 HIV-1 isolatesa
|
![]() View larger version (32K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 2. T-cell depletion in HIV-1-infected patients and in human lymphoid tissue infected ex vivo with patients' HIV-1 isolates. Shown are the numbers of CD4+ T cells in patients' blood and the loss of CD8 CCR5+ T cells in human lymphoid tissue infected ex vivo by HIV isolates from the same patients. Patients 435, 1047, and 1838 are nonswitch virus patients and yielded viruses of R5 phenotype throughout the study. Patients 2112 and 2242 are switch virus patients who acquired CXCR4-using virus 76 months after infection. The left axis and line show the CD4+ T cell count as the numbers of cells (106) per liter of blood. The regression line and corresponding linear equation are indicated for each patient during the follow-up period. The right axis and bars show the percent loss of CCR5+ CD8 T lymphocytes in ex vivo-infected lymphoid tissue from single donors 12 days postinfection relative to matched uninfected control tissue samples. The data represent the means plus standard errors of the mean of experiments with tissues from at least four donors. For each donor, tissue cell numbers were evaluated in 27 or 54 pooled tissue blocks. The infection date was calculated as the midpoint between the last negative and the first positive samples.
|
Also, for any given patient, the levels of CD8 CCR5+ T-cell depletion in infected tissues were different for sequential R5 isolates. Because of the donor-to-donor variability, we restricted comparison of these sequential isolates to matched tissue blocks. In both switch virus patients (2112 and 2242), the depletion of CD3+CD8 CCR5+ cells was higher for the last than for the first sequential isolate (Fig. 2), while in nonswitch virus patients, the depletion of CD3+CD8 CCR5+ cells was already high with the early isolate and did not increase over time (Fig. 2).
To test to what extent the decrease in the numbers of CD3+ CD8 CCR5+ cells in infected tissues is due to cell depletion and to what extent it is due to downregulation of CCR5 following HIV-1 infection of tissues, we compared the decrease in the number of CD3+ CD8 CCR5+ cells with that in the total number of CD3+ CD8 cells. We assumed that the death of a CD3+ CD8 CCR5+ cell should be reflected by the loss of a CD3+ CD8 cell, whereas a decrease in the number of CD3+ CD8 CCR5+ cells due to downregulation would not be reflected in a decrease in the total number of CD3+ CD8 cells. However, the levels of depletion in the R5-infected tissues were too small to make this comparison statistically sound. Nevertheless, gating on productively infected cells, we found that on average only 5.3% ± 0.8% of the CD3+ CD8 p24+ cells expressed CCR5 (19 infections by 10 different isolates in tissues from 10 different donors), indicating that in productively infected cells CCR5 has been downregulated (Table 3). Therefore, CD3+ CD8 p24+ cells are the counterparts of CCR5+ CD3+ CD4+ cells in the noninfected population.
T cells of different activation status support productive infection of R5 HIV-1 isolates. We investigated whether the tested HIV isolates differentially infect and deplete activated and nonactivated cells. There were no differences between the two patient categories, switch and nonswitch virus patients (data not shown), and the data below are therefore pooled. In this study, we defined activation as expression of CD69 and HLA-DR. The former is considered an early activation marker, and the latter is considered a late one (11, 24). First, we compared the distribution of activation markers among CD3+ CD8 cells with that among cells of the CD3+ CD8 CCR5+ subset (Fig. 3A shows a representative experiment). On average, 82% ± 1% (n = 6) of the CD3+ CD8 cells were CD69 HLA-DR, thus exhibiting a nonactivated phenotype. Single-positive CD69+ cells, single-positive HLA-DR+ cells, and double-positive CD69+ HLA-DR+ cells constituted on average 13% ± 1%, 4% ± 0.4%, and 1% ± 0.1% of the CD3+ CD8 cells, respectively. In the CCR5-expressing subsets of CD3+ CD8 cells, CD69 HLA-DR, CD69+ HLA-DR, CD69 HLA-DR+, and CD69+ HLA-DR+ cells constituted 71% ± 5%, 20% ± 4%, 6% ± 1%, and 3% ± 0.8% of the CD3+ CD8 CCR5+ cells, respectively, thus representing a significant increase (P = 0.004; Mann-Whitney test) in the frequency of double-positive activated cells in this population. Does HIV-1 infection of lymphoid tissue result in activation of the general T-lymphocyte population and/or of infected T cells? Analysis of tissues from six different donors infected with 11 isolates revealed no significant difference between the distributions of activation markers among CD3+ CD8 cells and in matched uninfected tissues: the proportions of CD69 HLA-DR, CD69+ HLA-DR, CD69 HLA-DR+, and CD69+ HLA-DR+ cells were 83% ± 1%, 12% ± 0.9%, 4% ± 0.3%, and 1% ± 0.1%, respectively (n = 14; P = 0.937; Mann-Whitney test) (Fig. 3 shows a representative experiment). In contrast, in productively infected T cells (CD3+ CD8 p24+), activation marker expression was significantly increased compared with that in the total population of CD3+ CD8 cells: CD69 HLA-DR, CD69+ HLA-DR, CD69 HLA-DR+, and CD69+ HLA-DR+ cells in the CD8 p24+ T-cell subset constituted 66% ± 3%, 19% ± 3%, 10% ± 1%, and 5% ± 1% of the total number of cells, respectively (n = 13; P = 0.002; Mann-Whitney test) (Fig. 3B shows a representative experiment). However, the frequencies of activated cells among p24+ CD8 T lymphocytes did not significantly (P = 0.078; Mann-Whitney test) exceed that in the general population of CCR5+ CD8 T lymphocytes, which are potential targets for R5 HIV-1.
![]() View larger version (32K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 3. Activation status of lymphocytes in HIV-1-infected human lymphoid tissues ex vivo; comparison of the distributions of activation markers among different cell populations in uninfected lymphoid tissue and in ex vivo-infected tissue after 12 days in culture. The data were obtained in experiments using 54 pooled tissue blocks per condition from a single donor. (A) Distributions of CD69 and HLA-DR among CD8 CD3+ lymphocytes and CCR5+ CD8 CD3+ lymphocytes in uninfected tissue; one representative experiment out of six is shown. The contour plots are at log 50% probability. (B) Distributions of CD69 and HLA-DR among CD8 CD3+ lymphocytes (left) and p24+ CD8 CD3+ lymphocytes (right) in tissue infected with isolates 314 and 4223 from patient 1047; one representative experiment out of six matching that presented in panel A is shown.
|
HIV-1 infects CD25+ T cells. We investigated whether the R5 HIV-1 isolates used in this study infect CD4+ T cells that express CD25, a marker which is present on both activated and regulatory CD4+ T cells (53, 54, 56). As in our studies of activation markers, we have pooled the data from switch and nonswitch virus patients. In the tonsillar tissues from six donors used for these experiments, CD25+ cells constituted 19% ± 1% of the CD3+ CD8 cells. Of these CD25+ cells, 16% ± 4% were CD69+, 14% ± 4% were HLA-DR+, and 1.4% ± 0.3% were CD69+ HLA-DR+. Further analysis showed that the CD3+ CD8 CCR5+ subset was significantly enriched in CD25+ cells, which constituted 30% ± 2% (n = 6; P = 0.004; Mann-Whitney test) of this subset (Fig. 4A shows a representative experiment). Infection of tissues with HIV-1 did not change the fraction of CD25+ CD3+ CD8 cells (17% ± 1% in infected tissues versus 19% ± 1% in matched controls; P = 0.132; n = 14; Mann-Whitney test). In contrast, the fraction of productively infected (CD3+ CD8 p24+) T cells was significantly enriched in CD25+ cells relative to that in the total CD3+ CD8 subset (Fig. 4B shows a representative experiment): CD25+ CD3+ CD8 p24+ cells constituted 48% ± 3% of the CD3+ CD8 p24+ T cells. In summary, CD4+ CD25+ T cells efficiently support productive infection by HIV-1 of the R5 phenotype.
![]() View larger version (31K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 4. Expression of CD25 on T cells in HIV-1-infected human lymphoid tissue ex vivo; comparison of the distributions of CD25 among different cell populations in uninfected and ex vivo-infected lymphoid tissue after 12 days in culture. The data were obtained in experiments using 54 pooled tissue blocks per condition from a single donor. (A) Distributions of CD25 among CD8 CD3+ lymphocytes (left) and among CCR5+ CD8 CD3+ lymphocytes (right) in uninfected tissue. The contour plots are at log 50% probability. Presented is one representative experiment out of six. (B) The distributions of CD25 among CD8 CD3+ lymphocytes (left) and among p24+ CD8 CD3+ lymphocytes in tissue infected with isolates 314 and 4223 from patient 1047; one representative experiment out of six matching that presented in panel A is shown.
|
|
|
|---|
It is widely accepted that HIV disease progression is determined by a complex and as yet poorly understood combination of host and viral factors (15). By infecting lymphoid tissue from one donor with a panel of different isolates, and by infecting a panel of lymphoid tissues from different donors with one particular HIV-1 isolate, we were able to separate which parameters are controlled by host and viral factors in HIV tissue pathogenesis. We have found that although the absolute levels of viral replication varied as much as 30-fold between tissues obtained from different donors and were different for different isolates, the viral hierarchy among sequential isolates remained constant, emphasizing viral factors as major determinants of the relative replication capacities of these isolates in human lymphoid tissues ex vivo. In contrast, the absolute replicative capacity of HIV-1 isolates is controlled by host (tissue) factors that seem to enhance or suppress all replicating HIV-1 variants.
Replication of HIV isolates in this ex vivo system resulted in depletion of CD4+ T cells, but only those expressing CCR5 (see also reference 22). These T cells constitute a minority of CD4+ T cells (5, 22), and therefore, the 50% depletion of the cells observed in our experiments did not translate into a significant depletion of the total numbers of CD4+ T lymphocytes. We found that depletion of CD4+ CCR5+ cells was accompanied not only by downregulation of CD4, observed earlier in other systems (26, 45), but also by downregulation of CCR5. Coreceptor downregulation was reported earlier for CXCR4 (14, 57, 59) and has recently been reported for CCR5 (8, 59) also.
It should be pointed out that the levels of CCR5+ CD4+ T-cell depletion caused by a given isolate in tissues from different donors were similar in spite of the large variation in the levels of replication. Thus, together with relative replicative capacity, the absolute levels of CD4+ T-cell depletion by the R5 isolates used in the present work seemed to be largely controlled by viral factors, whereas the absolute replication levels were greatly affected by a tissue (host) factor(s).
We made attempts to identify host factors by measuring tissue production of cytokines and chemokines, since these host factors are known to affect HIV-1 pathogenesis (1). However, in our ex vivo tissues, no infection with any of the primary R5 HIV-1 isolates affected the levels of the 16 measured cytokines/chemokines. Earlier, similar results were reported for an R5 laboratory strain and for recombinant viruses carrying R5 Envs, whereas an X4 strain significantly changed chemokine release (9, 27). However, one recent study (8) has suggested that R5 HIV-1 infection of fetal thymic organ cultures induces IL-10 and transforming growth factor ß, cytokines not studied here, and thereby upregulates the expression of CCR5.
Another tissue factor that may control the absolute level of viral replication is the activation status of cell targets. The use of ex vivo human lymphoid tissues, which do not require exogenous stimulation to support productive HIV-1 infection, allowed us to address this question. In vitro infection of PBMC requires activated or mature cells (7, 25, 42, 47, 52). In contrast, in the context of lymphoid tissue, nonactivated CD4+ T cells support productive infection as well (13, 19, 20). Recently, Kinter et al. (31) provided further evidence for the role of the lymphoid tissue microenvironment in controlling HIV infection by demonstrating that HIV-1 productively infected nonactivated CD4+ T cells in tissue ex vivo, while the same cells could not be infected if isolated from this tissue. Our present results confirm that in tissues the majority of the productively infected cells are of the nonactivated phenotype, as evidenced by the lack of CD69 and HLA-DR expression. These results reflect the situation in vivo, where HIV-1 gene expression is detected in nonactivated and naïve cells (4, 37, 60).
To further characterize tissue cell targets for primary R5 isolates, we analyzed the expression of CD25, a marker of activated CD4+ T cells (56) that is also expressed on regulatory CD4+ T cells (53, 54). Tonsils are thought to harbor a larger proportion of regulatory CD4+ CD25+ T cells than peripheral blood, because of constant antigen exposure and the need to control inflammation and tissue destruction (50). We found that only a small number of T cells coexpress the activation markers CD69, HLA-DR, and CD25. This finding supports the notion that a fraction of CD4+ CD25+ cells in tonsil tissue have a regulatory function and may not be activated. This may be an important host factor affecting HIV infection, in view of a recently reported suppression of HIV-specific responses in vitro by CD25+ regulatory T cells isolated from HIV-infected donors (32). Infection and depletion of T-cell subsets, as shown by our experiments, may include the regulatory T cells and could be an important host factor affecting the efficiency of HIV replication ex vivo.
As discussed above, the relative replication level and the ability to deplete CD4+ T cells are largely determined by viral factors. Although several viral gene products, including Nef, Vpu, Vpr, and Vif, have been reported to determine viral replication capacity in various systems, including the one used for the current study (17, 18, 36, 44, 51), most of our knowledge regarding differential pathogenesis of HIV-1 in tissues is related to coreceptor usage. Rapid progression of HIV-1 disease has been shown to be associated with evolution of virus coreceptor use from CCR5 to CXCR4. One explanation for the higher virulence of X4 viruses is the abundance of their target cells (CD4+ CXCR4+) in lymphoid tissue (22). However, it has been an enigma that about 50% of patients progress to AIDS without apparent R5-to-X4 evolution (12, 28).
Here, we studied viral isolates, all of which were of the R5 phenotype. Whatever the viral factors that determine differential pathogenesis of these R5 isolates in tissues are, we provide here the first published evidence that the evolution of these factors is consistent with the pattern of disease progression. The degree of depletion of CCR5+ CD4+ T cells by a given viral isolate may have predictive value and reflects whether the individual from whom the virus was obtained eventually became a switch virus patient. Indeed, R5 viruses isolated from nonswitch virus patients depleted more target cells than isolates from switch virus patients. Conversely, the patients' viral load, expressed as the level of HIV-1 p24 antigen in serum, was undetectable in nonswitch virus patients, while it was detectable in switch virus patients. It is tempting to speculate that the highly cytopathic R5 virus in nonswitch patients eliminates the CD4+ CCR5+ target cells and thereby limits its own replication. The less cytopathic R5 virus from switch virus patients leaves more target cells intact and therefore replicates to higher titers in vivo. A high viral load in vivo, in combination with the eventual appearance of CXCR4-using virus in the switch virus patient, results in an increased severity of HIV-1 infection, with early clinical symptoms, and in low CD4 T-cell counts. Also, the appearance of X4 HIV-1 in switch virus patients seems to be preceded by an evolution of R5 HIV-1, since our experiments demonstrated that sequential isolates from such patients increase their ability to deplete CCR5+ CD4+ T cells during the course of the patient's infection.
In conclusion, various host factors seem to enhance or inhibit replication of all viral isolates, whereas viral factors determine which isolate has a higher or lower relative capacity to replicate. R5 isolates from patients with progressive HIV-1 disease can efficiently infect, replicate, and deplete CCR5+ CD4+ T cells in human lymphoid tissue ex vivo. In the course of disease progression leading to the switch to X4 dominance, R5 HIV-1 variants appear to undergo evolution associated with an increase of their cytopathicity. R5 HIV-1 isolates from nonswitch virus patients are more cytopathic than R5 variants from switch virus patients, and this difference may explain the steady decline of CD4+ T cells in patients with continuous dominance of R5 HIV-1.
Grants were received from the Swedish Research Council, the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency/Department for Research Cooperation (SIDA/SAREC), and the Crafoord Foundation.
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»