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Co-dependence of HTLV-1 p12 and p8 Functions in Virus Persistence
HTLV-1 orf-I is linked to immune evasion, viral replication and persistence. Examining the orf-I sequence of 160 HTLV-1-infected individuals; we found polymorphism of orf-I that alters the relative amounts of p12 and its cleavage product p8. Three groups were identified on the basis of p12 and p8 ex...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Public Library of Science
2014
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4223054/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25375128 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004454 |
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author | Pise-Masison, Cynthia A. de Castro-Amarante, Maria Fernanda Enose-Akahata, Yoshimi Buchmann, R. Cody Fenizia, Claudio Washington Parks, Robyn Edwards, Dustin Fiocchi, Martina Alcantara, Luiz Carlos Bialuk, Izabela Graham, Jhanelle Walser, Jean-Claude McKinnon, Katherine Galvão-Castro, Bernardo Gessain, Antoine Venzon, David Jacobson, Steven Franchini, Genoveffa |
author_facet | Pise-Masison, Cynthia A. de Castro-Amarante, Maria Fernanda Enose-Akahata, Yoshimi Buchmann, R. Cody Fenizia, Claudio Washington Parks, Robyn Edwards, Dustin Fiocchi, Martina Alcantara, Luiz Carlos Bialuk, Izabela Graham, Jhanelle Walser, Jean-Claude McKinnon, Katherine Galvão-Castro, Bernardo Gessain, Antoine Venzon, David Jacobson, Steven Franchini, Genoveffa |
author_sort | Pise-Masison, Cynthia A. |
collection | PubMed |
description | HTLV-1 orf-I is linked to immune evasion, viral replication and persistence. Examining the orf-I sequence of 160 HTLV-1-infected individuals; we found polymorphism of orf-I that alters the relative amounts of p12 and its cleavage product p8. Three groups were identified on the basis of p12 and p8 expression: predominantly p12, predominantly p8 and balanced expression of p12 and p8. We found a significant association between balanced expression of p12 and p8 with high viral DNA loads, a correlate of disease development. To determine the individual roles of p12 and p8 in viral persistence, we constructed infectious molecular clones expressing p12 and p8 (D26), predominantly p12 (G29S) or predominantly p8 (N26). As we previously showed, cells expressing N26 had a higher level of virus transmission in vitro. However, when inoculated into Rhesus macaques, cells producing N26 virus caused only a partial seroconversion in 3 of 4 animals and only 1 of those animals was HTLV-1 DNA positive by PCR. None of the animals exposed to G29S virus seroconverted or had detectable viral DNA. In contrast, 3 of 4 animals exposed to D26 virus seroconverted and were HTLV-1 positive by PCR. In vitro studies in THP-1 cells suggested that expression of p8 was sufficient for productive infection of monocytes. Since orf-I plays a role in T-cell activation and recognition; we compared the CTL response elicited by CD4(+) T-cells infected with the different HTLV-1 clones. Although supernatant p19 levels and viral DNA loads for all four infected lines were similar, a significant difference in Tax-specific HLA.A2-restricted killing was observed. Cells infected with Orf-I-knockout virus (12KO), G29S or N26 were killed by CTLs, whereas cells infected with D26 virus were resistant to CTL killing. These results indicate that efficient viral persistence and spread require the combined functions of p12 and p8. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-4223054 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2014 |
publisher | Public Library of Science |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-42230542014-11-13 Co-dependence of HTLV-1 p12 and p8 Functions in Virus Persistence Pise-Masison, Cynthia A. de Castro-Amarante, Maria Fernanda Enose-Akahata, Yoshimi Buchmann, R. Cody Fenizia, Claudio Washington Parks, Robyn Edwards, Dustin Fiocchi, Martina Alcantara, Luiz Carlos Bialuk, Izabela Graham, Jhanelle Walser, Jean-Claude McKinnon, Katherine Galvão-Castro, Bernardo Gessain, Antoine Venzon, David Jacobson, Steven Franchini, Genoveffa PLoS Pathog Research Article HTLV-1 orf-I is linked to immune evasion, viral replication and persistence. Examining the orf-I sequence of 160 HTLV-1-infected individuals; we found polymorphism of orf-I that alters the relative amounts of p12 and its cleavage product p8. Three groups were identified on the basis of p12 and p8 expression: predominantly p12, predominantly p8 and balanced expression of p12 and p8. We found a significant association between balanced expression of p12 and p8 with high viral DNA loads, a correlate of disease development. To determine the individual roles of p12 and p8 in viral persistence, we constructed infectious molecular clones expressing p12 and p8 (D26), predominantly p12 (G29S) or predominantly p8 (N26). As we previously showed, cells expressing N26 had a higher level of virus transmission in vitro. However, when inoculated into Rhesus macaques, cells producing N26 virus caused only a partial seroconversion in 3 of 4 animals and only 1 of those animals was HTLV-1 DNA positive by PCR. None of the animals exposed to G29S virus seroconverted or had detectable viral DNA. In contrast, 3 of 4 animals exposed to D26 virus seroconverted and were HTLV-1 positive by PCR. In vitro studies in THP-1 cells suggested that expression of p8 was sufficient for productive infection of monocytes. Since orf-I plays a role in T-cell activation and recognition; we compared the CTL response elicited by CD4(+) T-cells infected with the different HTLV-1 clones. Although supernatant p19 levels and viral DNA loads for all four infected lines were similar, a significant difference in Tax-specific HLA.A2-restricted killing was observed. Cells infected with Orf-I-knockout virus (12KO), G29S or N26 were killed by CTLs, whereas cells infected with D26 virus were resistant to CTL killing. These results indicate that efficient viral persistence and spread require the combined functions of p12 and p8. Public Library of Science 2014-11-06 /pmc/articles/PMC4223054/ /pubmed/25375128 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004454 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. |
spellingShingle | Research Article Pise-Masison, Cynthia A. de Castro-Amarante, Maria Fernanda Enose-Akahata, Yoshimi Buchmann, R. Cody Fenizia, Claudio Washington Parks, Robyn Edwards, Dustin Fiocchi, Martina Alcantara, Luiz Carlos Bialuk, Izabela Graham, Jhanelle Walser, Jean-Claude McKinnon, Katherine Galvão-Castro, Bernardo Gessain, Antoine Venzon, David Jacobson, Steven Franchini, Genoveffa Co-dependence of HTLV-1 p12 and p8 Functions in Virus Persistence |
title | Co-dependence of HTLV-1 p12 and p8 Functions in Virus Persistence |
title_full | Co-dependence of HTLV-1 p12 and p8 Functions in Virus Persistence |
title_fullStr | Co-dependence of HTLV-1 p12 and p8 Functions in Virus Persistence |
title_full_unstemmed | Co-dependence of HTLV-1 p12 and p8 Functions in Virus Persistence |
title_short | Co-dependence of HTLV-1 p12 and p8 Functions in Virus Persistence |
title_sort | co-dependence of htlv-1 p12 and p8 functions in virus persistence |
topic | Research Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4223054/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25375128 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004454 |
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