48 research outputs found

    Low Levels of Perforin Expression in CD8+ T Lymphocyte Granules in Lymphoid Tissue during Acute Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Infection

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    Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) responses are detectable shortly after the acute phase of HIV infection, but they cannot control viral replication and prevent development of chronic immune suppression. This article describes a defect in the coexpression of perforin in granzyme A-positive CD8+ T cells in lymphoid tissue from patients with acute HIV infection and a reduction in the perforin-dependent nuclear translocation of granzyme A. Furthermore, intracellular levels of HIV DNA and RNA found in lymphoid tissue were higher (10-100 times) than those found in blood, and blood samples showed more-coordinated cellular perforin/granzyme A expression. This suggests that mechanisms inhibiting CTL-mediated cytotoxicity are operative in lymphoid tissue early in the course of HIV infectio

    The viral protein corona directs viral pathogenesis and amyloid aggregation

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    Artificial nanoparticles accumulate a protein corona layer in biological fluids, which significantly influences their bioactivity. As nanosized obligate intracellular parasites, viruses share many biophysical properties with artificial nanoparticles in extracellular environments and here we show that respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) and herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) accumulate a rich and distinctive protein corona in different biological fluids. Moreover, we show that corona pre-coating differentially affects viral infectivity and immune cell activation. In addition, we demonstrate that viruses bind amyloidogenic peptides in their corona and catalyze amyloid formation via surface-assisted heterogeneous nucleation. Importantly, we show that HSV-1 catalyzes the aggregation of the amyloid beta-peptide (A beta(42)), a major constituent of amyloid plaques in Alzheimer's disease, in vitro and in animal models. Our results highlight the viral protein corona as an acquired structural layer that is critical for viral-host interactions and illustrate a mechanistic convergence between viral and amyloid pathologies.Peer reviewe

    Exposure to Apoptotic Activated CD4+ T Cells Induces Maturation and APOBEC3G- Mediated Inhibition of HIV-1 Infection in Dendritic Cells

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    Dendritic cells (DCs) are activated by signaling via pathogen-specific receptors or exposure to inflammatory mediators. Here we show that co-culturing DCs with apoptotic HIV-infected activated CD4+ T cells (ApoInf) or apoptotic uninfected activated CD4+ T cells (ApoAct) induced expression of co-stimulatory molecules and cytokine release. In addition, we measured a reduced HIV infection rate in DCs after co-culture with ApoAct. A prerequisite for reduced HIV infection in DCs was activation of CD4+ T cells before apoptosis induction. DCs exposed to ApoAct or ApoInf secreted MIP-1α, MIP-1β, MCP-1, and TNF-α; this effect was retained in the presence of exogenous HIV. The ApoAct-mediated induction of co-stimulatory CD86 molecules and reduction of HIV infection in DCs were partially abrogated after blocking TNF-α using monoclonal antibodies. APOBEC3G expression in DCs was increased in co-cultures of DCs and ApoAct but not by apoptotic resting CD4+ T cells (ApoRest). Silencing of APOBEC3G in DC abrogated the HIV inhibitory effect mediated by ApoAct. Sequence analyses of an env region revealed significant induction of G-to-A hypermutations in the context of GG or GA dinucleotides in DNA isolated from DCs exposed to HIV and ApoAct. Thus, ApoAct-mediated DC maturation resulted in induction of APOBEC3G that was important for inhibition of HIV-infection in DCs. These findings underscore the complexity of differential DC responses evoked upon interaction with resting as compared with activated dying cells during HIV infection

    Generation of neutralizing antibodies and divergence of SIVmac239 in cynomolgus macaques following short-term early antiretroviral therapy.

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    Neutralizing antibodies (NAb) able to react to heterologous viruses are generated during natural HIV-1 infection in some individuals. Further knowledge is required in order to understand the factors contributing to induction of cross-reactive NAb responses. Here a well-established model of experimental pathogenic infection in cynomolgus macaques, which reproduces long-lasting HIV-1 infection, was used to study the NAb response as well as the viral evolution of the highly neutralization-resistant SIVmac239. Twelve animals were infected intravenously with SIVmac239. Antiretroviral therapy (ART) was initiated ten days post-inoculation and administered daily for four months. Viral load, CD4(+) T-cell counts, total IgG levels, and breadth as well as strength of NAb in plasma were compared simultaneously over 14 months. In addition, envs from plasma samples were sequenced at three time points in all animals in order to assess viral evolution. We report here that seven of the 12 animals controlled viremia to below 10(4) copies/ml of plasma after discontinuation of ART and that this control was associated with a low level of evolutionary divergence. Macaques that controlled viral load developed broader NAb responses early on. Furthermore, escape mutations, such as V67M and R751G, were identified in virus sequenced from all animals with uncontrolled viremia. Bayesian estimation of ancestral population genetic diversity (PGD) showed an increase in this value in non-controlling or transient-controlling animals during the first 5.5 months of infection, in contrast to virus-controlling animals. Similarly, non- or transient controllers displayed more positively-selected amino-acid substitutions. An early increase in PGD, resulting in the generation of positively-selected amino-acid substitutions, greater divergence and relative high viral load after ART withdrawal, may have contributed to the generation of potent NAb in several animals after SIVmac239 infection. However, early broad NAb responses correlated with relatively preserved CD4(+) T-cell numbers, low viral load and limited viral divergence

    Is There a Role for Immunoregulatory and Antiviral Oligonucleotides Acting in the Extracellular Space? A Review and Hypothesis

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    Here, we link approved and emerging nucleic acid-based therapies with the expanding universe of small non-coding RNAs (sncRNAs) and the innate immune responses that sense oligonucleotides taken up into endosomes. The Toll-like receptors (TLRs) 3, 7, 8, and 9 are located in endosomes and can detect nucleic acids taken up through endocytic routes. These receptors are key triggers in the defense against viruses and/or bacterial infections, yet they also constitute an Achilles heel towards the discrimination between self- and pathogenic nucleic acids. The compartmentalization of nucleic acids and the activity of nucleases are key components in avoiding autoimmune reactions against nucleic acids, but we still lack knowledge on the plethora of nucleic acids that might be released into the extracellular space upon infections, inflammation, and other stress responses involving increased cell death. We review recent findings that a set of single-stranded oligonucleotides (length of 25–40 nucleotides (nt)) can temporarily block ligands destined for endosomes expressing TLRs in human monocyte-derived dendritic cells. We discuss knowledge gaps and highlight the existence of a pool of RNA with an approximate length of 30–40 nt that may still have unappreciated regulatory functions in physiology and in the defense against viruses as gatekeepers of endosomal uptake through certain routes

    Exogenous Nef is an inhibitor of Mycobacterium tuberculosis-induced tumor necrosis factor-α production and macrophage apoptosis

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    Human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) impairs tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α)-mediated macrophage apoptosis induced by Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb). HIV Nef protein plays an important role in the pathogenesis of AIDS. We have tested the hypothesis that exogenous Nef is a factor that inhibits TNF-a production/apoptosis in macrophages infected with Mtb. We demonstrate that Mtb and Nef individually trigger TNF-α production in macrophages. However, TNF-α production is dampened when the two are present simultaneously, probably through cross-regulation of the individual signaling pathways leading to activation of the TNF-α promoter. Mtb-induced TNF-α production is abrogated upon mutation of the Ets, Egr, Sp1, CRE, or AP1 binding sites on the TNF-α promoter, whereas Nef-mediated promoter activation depends only on the CRE and AP1 binding sites, pointing to differences in the mechanisms of activation of the promoter. Mtb-dependent promoter activation depends on the mitogen-activated kinase (MAPK) kinase kinase ASK1 and on MEK/ERK signaling. Nef inhibits ASK1/p38 MAPK-dependent Mtb-induced TNF-α production probably by inhibiting binding of ATF2 to the TNF-α promoter. It also inhibits MEK/ERK-dependent Mtb-induced binding of FosB to the promoter. Nef-driven TNF-α production occurs in an ASK1-independent, Rac1/PAK1/p38 MAPK-dependent, and MEK/ERK-independent manner. The signaling pathways used by Mtb and Nef to trigger TNF-α production are therefore distinctly different. In addition to attenuating Mtb-dependent TNF-α promoter activation, Nef also reduces Mtb-dependent TNF-α mRNA stability probably through its ability to inhibit ASK1/p38 MAPK signaling. These results provide new insight into how HIV Nef probably exacerbates tuberculosis infection by virtue of its ability to dampen Mtb-induced TNF-α production

    Crystal structure of the HIV-2 neutralizing Fab fragment 7C8 with high specificity to the V3 region of gp125.

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    7C8 is a mouse monoclonal antibody specific for the third hypervariable region (V3) of the human immunodeficiency virus type 2 (HIV-2)-associated protein gp125. The three-dimensional crystal structure of the Fab fragment of 7C8, determined to 2.7 Ã… resolution, reveals a deep and narrow antigen-binding cleft with architecture appropriate for an elongated epitope. The highly hydrophobic cleft is bordered on one side by the negatively charged second complementarity determining region (CDR2) and the unusually long positively charged CDR3 of the heavy chain and, on the other side, by the CDR1 of the light chain. Analysis of 7C8 in complex with molecular models of monomeric and trimeric gp125 highlights the importance of a conserved stretch of residues FHSQ that is localized centrally on the V3 region of gp125. Furthermore, modeling also indicates that the Fab fragment neutralizes the virus by sterically impairing subsequent engagement of the gp125 trimer with the co-receptor on the target cell
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