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Dendritic Cell-induced Activation of Latent HIV-1 Provirus in Actively Proliferating Primary T Lymphocytes

HIV-1 latency remains a formidable barrier towards virus eradication as therapeutic attempts to purge these reservoirs are so far unsuccessful. The pool of transcriptionally silent proviruses is established early in infection and persists for a lifetime, even when viral loads are suppressed below de...

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Autores principales: van der Sluis, Renée M., van Montfort, Thijs, Pollakis, Georgios, Sanders, Rogier W., Speijer, Dave, Berkhout, Ben, Jeeninga, Rienk E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3605277/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23555263
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003259
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author van der Sluis, Renée M.
van Montfort, Thijs
Pollakis, Georgios
Sanders, Rogier W.
Speijer, Dave
Berkhout, Ben
Jeeninga, Rienk E.
author_facet van der Sluis, Renée M.
van Montfort, Thijs
Pollakis, Georgios
Sanders, Rogier W.
Speijer, Dave
Berkhout, Ben
Jeeninga, Rienk E.
author_sort van der Sluis, Renée M.
collection PubMed
description HIV-1 latency remains a formidable barrier towards virus eradication as therapeutic attempts to purge these reservoirs are so far unsuccessful. The pool of transcriptionally silent proviruses is established early in infection and persists for a lifetime, even when viral loads are suppressed below detection levels using anti-retroviral therapy. Upon therapy interruption the reservoir can re-establish systemic infection. Different cellular reservoirs that harbor latent provirus have been described. In this study we demonstrate that HIV-1 can also establish a silent integration in actively proliferating primary T lymphocytes. Co-culturing of these proliferating T lymphocytes with dendritic cells (DCs) activated the provirus from latency. Activation did not involve DC-mediated C-type lectin DC-SIGN signaling or TCR-stimulation but was mediated by DC-secreted component(s) and cell-cell interaction between DC and T lymphocyte that could be inhibited by blocking ICAM-1 dependent adhesion. These results imply that circulating DCs could purge HIV-1 from latency and re-initiate virus replication. Moreover, our data show that viral latency can be established early after infection and supports the idea that actively proliferating T lymphocytes with an effector phenotype contribute to the latent viral reservoir. Unraveling this physiologically relevant purging mechanism could provide useful information for the development of new therapeutic strategies that aim at the eradication of HIV-1 reservoirs.
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spelling pubmed-36052772013-04-03 Dendritic Cell-induced Activation of Latent HIV-1 Provirus in Actively Proliferating Primary T Lymphocytes van der Sluis, Renée M. van Montfort, Thijs Pollakis, Georgios Sanders, Rogier W. Speijer, Dave Berkhout, Ben Jeeninga, Rienk E. PLoS Pathog Research Article HIV-1 latency remains a formidable barrier towards virus eradication as therapeutic attempts to purge these reservoirs are so far unsuccessful. The pool of transcriptionally silent proviruses is established early in infection and persists for a lifetime, even when viral loads are suppressed below detection levels using anti-retroviral therapy. Upon therapy interruption the reservoir can re-establish systemic infection. Different cellular reservoirs that harbor latent provirus have been described. In this study we demonstrate that HIV-1 can also establish a silent integration in actively proliferating primary T lymphocytes. Co-culturing of these proliferating T lymphocytes with dendritic cells (DCs) activated the provirus from latency. Activation did not involve DC-mediated C-type lectin DC-SIGN signaling or TCR-stimulation but was mediated by DC-secreted component(s) and cell-cell interaction between DC and T lymphocyte that could be inhibited by blocking ICAM-1 dependent adhesion. These results imply that circulating DCs could purge HIV-1 from latency and re-initiate virus replication. Moreover, our data show that viral latency can be established early after infection and supports the idea that actively proliferating T lymphocytes with an effector phenotype contribute to the latent viral reservoir. Unraveling this physiologically relevant purging mechanism could provide useful information for the development of new therapeutic strategies that aim at the eradication of HIV-1 reservoirs. Public Library of Science 2013-03-21 /pmc/articles/PMC3605277/ /pubmed/23555263 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003259 Text en © 2013 van der Sluis et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
van der Sluis, Renée M.
van Montfort, Thijs
Pollakis, Georgios
Sanders, Rogier W.
Speijer, Dave
Berkhout, Ben
Jeeninga, Rienk E.
Dendritic Cell-induced Activation of Latent HIV-1 Provirus in Actively Proliferating Primary T Lymphocytes
title Dendritic Cell-induced Activation of Latent HIV-1 Provirus in Actively Proliferating Primary T Lymphocytes
title_full Dendritic Cell-induced Activation of Latent HIV-1 Provirus in Actively Proliferating Primary T Lymphocytes
title_fullStr Dendritic Cell-induced Activation of Latent HIV-1 Provirus in Actively Proliferating Primary T Lymphocytes
title_full_unstemmed Dendritic Cell-induced Activation of Latent HIV-1 Provirus in Actively Proliferating Primary T Lymphocytes
title_short Dendritic Cell-induced Activation of Latent HIV-1 Provirus in Actively Proliferating Primary T Lymphocytes
title_sort dendritic cell-induced activation of latent hiv-1 provirus in actively proliferating primary t lymphocytes
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3605277/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23555263
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003259
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