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Candidate Microbicides Block HIV-1 Infection of Human Immature Langerhans Cells within Epithelial Tissue Explants

Initial biologic events that underlie sexual transmission of HIV-1 are poorly understood. To model these events, we exposed human immature Langerhans cells (LCs) within epithelial tissue explants to two primary and two laboratory-adapted HIV-1 isolates. We detected HIV-1(Ba-L) infection in single LC...

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Autores principales: Kawamura, Tatsuyoshi, Cohen, Sandra S., Borris, Debra L., Aquilino, Elisabeth A., Glushakova, Svetlana, Margolis, Leonid B., Orenstein, Jan M., Offord, Robin E., Neurath, A. Robert, Blauvelt, Andrew
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 2000
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2193188/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11085750
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author Kawamura, Tatsuyoshi
Cohen, Sandra S.
Borris, Debra L.
Aquilino, Elisabeth A.
Glushakova, Svetlana
Margolis, Leonid B.
Orenstein, Jan M.
Offord, Robin E.
Neurath, A. Robert
Blauvelt, Andrew
author_facet Kawamura, Tatsuyoshi
Cohen, Sandra S.
Borris, Debra L.
Aquilino, Elisabeth A.
Glushakova, Svetlana
Margolis, Leonid B.
Orenstein, Jan M.
Offord, Robin E.
Neurath, A. Robert
Blauvelt, Andrew
author_sort Kawamura, Tatsuyoshi
collection PubMed
description Initial biologic events that underlie sexual transmission of HIV-1 are poorly understood. To model these events, we exposed human immature Langerhans cells (LCs) within epithelial tissue explants to two primary and two laboratory-adapted HIV-1 isolates. We detected HIV-1(Ba-L) infection in single LCs that spontaneously emigrated from explants by flow cytometry (median of infected LCs = 0.52%, range = 0.08–4.77%). HIV-1–infected LCs downregulated surface CD4 and CD83, whereas MHC class II, CD80, and CD86 were unchanged. For all HIV-1 strains tested, emigrated LCs were critical in establishing high levels of infection (0.1–1 μg HIV-1 p24 per milliliter) in cocultured autologous or allogeneic T cells. HIV-1(Ba-L) (an R5 HIV-1 strain) more efficiently infected LC–T cell cocultures when compared with HIV-1(IIIB) (an X4 HIV-1 strain). Interestingly, pretreatment of explants with either aminooxypentane-RANTES (regulated upon activation, normal T cell expressed and secreted) or cellulose acetate phthalate (potential microbicides) blocked HIV-1 infection of LCs and subsequent T cell infection in a dose-dependent manner. In summary, we document HIV-1 infection in single LCs after exposure to virus within epithelial tissue, demonstrate that relatively low numbers of these cells are capable of inducing high levels of infection in cocultured T cells, and provide a useful explant model for testing of agents designed to block sexual transmission of HIV-1.
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spelling pubmed-21931882008-04-16 Candidate Microbicides Block HIV-1 Infection of Human Immature Langerhans Cells within Epithelial Tissue Explants Kawamura, Tatsuyoshi Cohen, Sandra S. Borris, Debra L. Aquilino, Elisabeth A. Glushakova, Svetlana Margolis, Leonid B. Orenstein, Jan M. Offord, Robin E. Neurath, A. Robert Blauvelt, Andrew J Exp Med Original Article Initial biologic events that underlie sexual transmission of HIV-1 are poorly understood. To model these events, we exposed human immature Langerhans cells (LCs) within epithelial tissue explants to two primary and two laboratory-adapted HIV-1 isolates. We detected HIV-1(Ba-L) infection in single LCs that spontaneously emigrated from explants by flow cytometry (median of infected LCs = 0.52%, range = 0.08–4.77%). HIV-1–infected LCs downregulated surface CD4 and CD83, whereas MHC class II, CD80, and CD86 were unchanged. For all HIV-1 strains tested, emigrated LCs were critical in establishing high levels of infection (0.1–1 μg HIV-1 p24 per milliliter) in cocultured autologous or allogeneic T cells. HIV-1(Ba-L) (an R5 HIV-1 strain) more efficiently infected LC–T cell cocultures when compared with HIV-1(IIIB) (an X4 HIV-1 strain). Interestingly, pretreatment of explants with either aminooxypentane-RANTES (regulated upon activation, normal T cell expressed and secreted) or cellulose acetate phthalate (potential microbicides) blocked HIV-1 infection of LCs and subsequent T cell infection in a dose-dependent manner. In summary, we document HIV-1 infection in single LCs after exposure to virus within epithelial tissue, demonstrate that relatively low numbers of these cells are capable of inducing high levels of infection in cocultured T cells, and provide a useful explant model for testing of agents designed to block sexual transmission of HIV-1. The Rockefeller University Press 2000-11-20 /pmc/articles/PMC2193188/ /pubmed/11085750 Text en © 2000 The Rockefeller University Press This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Article
Kawamura, Tatsuyoshi
Cohen, Sandra S.
Borris, Debra L.
Aquilino, Elisabeth A.
Glushakova, Svetlana
Margolis, Leonid B.
Orenstein, Jan M.
Offord, Robin E.
Neurath, A. Robert
Blauvelt, Andrew
Candidate Microbicides Block HIV-1 Infection of Human Immature Langerhans Cells within Epithelial Tissue Explants
title Candidate Microbicides Block HIV-1 Infection of Human Immature Langerhans Cells within Epithelial Tissue Explants
title_full Candidate Microbicides Block HIV-1 Infection of Human Immature Langerhans Cells within Epithelial Tissue Explants
title_fullStr Candidate Microbicides Block HIV-1 Infection of Human Immature Langerhans Cells within Epithelial Tissue Explants
title_full_unstemmed Candidate Microbicides Block HIV-1 Infection of Human Immature Langerhans Cells within Epithelial Tissue Explants
title_short Candidate Microbicides Block HIV-1 Infection of Human Immature Langerhans Cells within Epithelial Tissue Explants
title_sort candidate microbicides block hiv-1 infection of human immature langerhans cells within epithelial tissue explants
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2193188/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11085750
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