Evaluating HIV-1 Infectivity and Virion Maturation across Varied Producer Cells with a Novel FRET-Based Detection and Quantification Assay

Author:

McGraw Aidan1,Hillmer Grace1,Choi Jeongpill1,Narayan Kedhar1,Mehedincu Stefania M.1,Marquez Dacia1,Tibebe Hasset1,DeCicco-Skinner Kathleen L.1ORCID,Izumi Taisuke12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, College of Arts and Sciences, American University, Washington, DC 20016, USA

2. District of Columbia Center for AIDS Research, Washington, DC 20052, USA

Abstract

The maturation of HIV-1 virions is a crucial process in viral replication. Although T-cells are a primary source of virus production, much of our understanding of virion maturation comes from studies using the HEK293T human embryonic kidney cell line. Notably, there is a lack of comparative analyses between T-cells and HEK293T cells in terms of virion maturation efficiency in existing literature. We previously developed an advanced virion visualization system based on the FRET principle, enabling the effective distinction between immature and mature virions via fluorescence microscopy. In this study, we utilized pseudotyped, single-round infectious viruses tagged with FRET labels (HIV-1 Gag-iFRET∆Env) derived from Jurkat (a human T-lymphocyte cell line) and HEK293T cells to evaluate their virion maturation rates. HEK293T-derived virions demonstrated a maturity rate of 81.79%, consistent with other studies and our previous findings. However, virions originating from Jurkat cells demonstrated a significantly reduced maturation rate of 68.67% (p < 0.0001). Correspondingly, viruses produced from Jurkat cells exhibited significantly reduced infectivity compared to those derived from HEK293T cells, with the relative infectivity measured at 65.3%. This finding is consistent with the observed relative maturation rate of viruses produced by Jurkat cells. These findings suggest that initiation of virion maturation directly correlates with viral infectivity. Our observation highlights the dynamic nature of virus–host interactions and their implications for virion production and infectivity.

Funder

research start-up fund

Spring 2024 CAS Faculty Mellon Fund from American University

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

MDPI AG

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