Entry and Transcription as Key Determinants of Differences in CD4 T-Cell Permissiveness to Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Infection

Author:

Ciuffi Angela1,Bleiber Gabriela1,Muñoz Miguel1,Martinez Raquel1,Loeuillet Corinne1,Rehr Manuela2,Fischer Marek3,Günthard Huldrych F.3,Oxenius Annette2,Meylan Pascal1,Bonhoeffer Sebastian4,Trono Didier5,Telenti Amalio1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Microbiology, University of Lausanne, Lausanne

2. Institute for Microbiology

3. Division of Infectious Diseases and Hospital Epidemiology, University Hospital Zurich, Zurich

4. Ecology and Evolution, ETH Zurich

5. Department of Genetics and Microbiology, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland

Abstract

ABSTRACT Isolated primary human cells from different donors vary in their permissiveness—the ability of cells to be infected and sustain the replication of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). We used replicating HIV-1 and single-cycle lentivirus vectors in a population approach to identify polymorphic steps during viral replication. We found that phytohemagglutinin-stimulated CD4 + CD45RO + CD57 T cells from healthy blood donors ( n = 128) exhibited a 5.2-log-unit range in virus production. For 20 selected donors representing the spectrum of CD4 T-cell permissiveness, we could attribute up to 42% of the total variance in virus production to entry factors and 48% to postentry steps. Efficacy at key intracellular steps of the replicative cycle (reverse transcription, integration, transcription and splicing, translation, and budding and release) varied from 0.71 to 1.45 log units among donors. However, interindividual differences in transcription efficiency alone accounted for 64 to 83% of the total variance in virus production that was attributable to postentry factors. While vesicular stomatitis virus G protein-mediated fusion was more efficacious than CCR5/CD4 entry, the latter resulted in greater transcriptional activity per proviral copy. The phenotype of provirus transcription was stable over time, indicating that it represents a genetic trait.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology

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