Elimination of HIV-1-Infected Primary T Cell Reservoirs in an In Vitro Model of Latency.

Establishment of long-lived cellular reservoirs of HIV-1 represents a major therapeutic challenge to virus eradication. In this study, we utilized a human primary cell model of HIV-1 latency to evaluate the requirements for efficient virus reactivation from, and the selective elimination of, latentl...

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Main Authors: Stephen A Rawlings, Francis Alonzo, Lina Kozhaya, Victor J Torres, Derya Unutmaz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4437782?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-f69a969bf91b4a12812987f81a780c5a2020-11-25T01:56:05ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01105e012691710.1371/journal.pone.0126917Elimination of HIV-1-Infected Primary T Cell Reservoirs in an In Vitro Model of Latency.Stephen A RawlingsFrancis AlonzoLina KozhayaVictor J TorresDerya UnutmazEstablishment of long-lived cellular reservoirs of HIV-1 represents a major therapeutic challenge to virus eradication. In this study, we utilized a human primary cell model of HIV-1 latency to evaluate the requirements for efficient virus reactivation from, and the selective elimination of, latently infected human T cells. Ectopic expression of BCL2 supported the replication and spread of R5-tropic HIV-1 in activated CD4(+) T cells. After IL-2 withdrawal, the HIV-1-infected T cells survived as resting cells for several months. Unexpectedly, these resting T cells continue to produce detectable levels of infectious virus, albeit at a lower frequency than cells maintained in IL-2. In the presence of HIV-1 inhibitors, reactivation of the resting T cells with γc-cytokines and allogeneic dendritic cells completely extinguished HIV-1 infectivity. We also evaluated the ability of the bacterial LukED cytotoxin to target and kill CCR5-expressing cells. After γc-cytokine stimulation, LukED treatment eliminated both HIV-1-infected resting cells and the non-infected CCR5+ cells. Importantly, complete clearance of in vitro HIV-1 reservoirs by LukED required a lower threshold of cytokine signals relative to HIV-1 inhibitors. Thus, the primary T cell-based HIV-1 latency model could facilitate the development of novel agents and therapeutic strategies that could effectively eradicate HIV-1.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4437782?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stephen A Rawlings
Francis Alonzo
Lina Kozhaya
Victor J Torres
Derya Unutmaz
spellingShingle Stephen A Rawlings
Francis Alonzo
Lina Kozhaya
Victor J Torres
Derya Unutmaz
Elimination of HIV-1-Infected Primary T Cell Reservoirs in an In Vitro Model of Latency.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Stephen A Rawlings
Francis Alonzo
Lina Kozhaya
Victor J Torres
Derya Unutmaz
author_sort Stephen A Rawlings
title Elimination of HIV-1-Infected Primary T Cell Reservoirs in an In Vitro Model of Latency.
title_short Elimination of HIV-1-Infected Primary T Cell Reservoirs in an In Vitro Model of Latency.
title_full Elimination of HIV-1-Infected Primary T Cell Reservoirs in an In Vitro Model of Latency.
title_fullStr Elimination of HIV-1-Infected Primary T Cell Reservoirs in an In Vitro Model of Latency.
title_full_unstemmed Elimination of HIV-1-Infected Primary T Cell Reservoirs in an In Vitro Model of Latency.
title_sort elimination of hiv-1-infected primary t cell reservoirs in an in vitro model of latency.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Establishment of long-lived cellular reservoirs of HIV-1 represents a major therapeutic challenge to virus eradication. In this study, we utilized a human primary cell model of HIV-1 latency to evaluate the requirements for efficient virus reactivation from, and the selective elimination of, latently infected human T cells. Ectopic expression of BCL2 supported the replication and spread of R5-tropic HIV-1 in activated CD4(+) T cells. After IL-2 withdrawal, the HIV-1-infected T cells survived as resting cells for several months. Unexpectedly, these resting T cells continue to produce detectable levels of infectious virus, albeit at a lower frequency than cells maintained in IL-2. In the presence of HIV-1 inhibitors, reactivation of the resting T cells with γc-cytokines and allogeneic dendritic cells completely extinguished HIV-1 infectivity. We also evaluated the ability of the bacterial LukED cytotoxin to target and kill CCR5-expressing cells. After γc-cytokine stimulation, LukED treatment eliminated both HIV-1-infected resting cells and the non-infected CCR5+ cells. Importantly, complete clearance of in vitro HIV-1 reservoirs by LukED required a lower threshold of cytokine signals relative to HIV-1 inhibitors. Thus, the primary T cell-based HIV-1 latency model could facilitate the development of novel agents and therapeutic strategies that could effectively eradicate HIV-1.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4437782?pdf=render
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