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Monocytes Contribute to Differential Immune Pressure on R5 versus X4 HIV through the Adipocytokine Visfatin/NAMPT
Authors
A Korner
A Vyakarnam
+55 more
A Weiss
AJ McMichael
AR Moschen
C Kamp
CA Wiley
CB Moore
D Friebe
DD Richman
E Beirnaert
Eric Florence
FL Graham
G Jones
G Moncunill
Geert Raes
Guido Vanham
Hans Jürgen Sass
Huyen Thanh Thi Tran
I Navratilova
I Navratilova
J Weber
JM Carr
JP Moore
K Kedzierska
K Oswald-Richter
KK Arien
KL Jones
L Nisius
L Sguanci
Leo Heyndrickx
LJ Montaner
LJ Reed
Marc Vekemans
O Hartley
P Lemey
Patrick De Baetselier
R Van den Bergh
Rafael Van den Bergh
Rosina Gabriel Imiru
RR Regoes
S Aquaro
S Bewick
S Crowe
S Jiang
S Pillai
SB Gordon
SD Smith
SM Wahl
SS Sonoli
Stephan Grzesiek
Sébastien Morin
Teunis B. H. Geijtenbeek
X Wei
Y Kawashima
Y Van Herrewege
Y Van Herrewege
Publication date
1 January 2012
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Doi
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on
PubMed
Abstract
Background: The immune system exerts a diversifying selection pressure on HIV through cellular, humoral and innate mechanisms. This pressure drives viral evolution throughout infection. A better understanding of the natural immune pressure on the virus during infection is warranted, given the clinical interest in eliciting and sustaining an immune response to HIV which can help to control the infection. We undertook to evaluate the potential of the novel HIV-induced, monocyte-derived factor visfatin to modulate viral infection, as part of the innate immune pressure on viral populations. Results: We show that visfatin is capable of selectively inhibiting infection by R5 HIV strains in macrophages and resting PBMC in vitro, while at the same time remaining indifferent to or even favouring infection by X4 strains. Furthermore, visfatin exerts a direct effect on the relative fitness of R5 versus X4 infections in a viral competition setup. Direct interaction of visfatin with the CCR5 receptor is proposed as a putative mechanism for this differential effect. Possible in vivo relevance of visfatin induction is illustrated by its association with the dominance of CXCR4-using HIV in the plasma. Conclusions: As an innate factor produced by monocytes, visfatin is capable of inhibiting infections by R5 but not X4 strains, reflecting a potential selective pressure against R5 viruses. © 2012 Van den Bergh et al.SCOPUS: ar.jinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe
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