Use of New T-Cell-Based Cell Lines Expressing Two Luciferase Reporters for Accurately Evaluating Susceptibility to Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Drugs
-
Published:2007-02
Issue:2
Volume:45
Page:477-487
-
ISSN:0095-1137
-
Container-title:Journal of Clinical Microbiology
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:J Clin Microbiol
Author:
Chiba-Mizutani Tomoko12, Miura Hideka1, Matsuda Masakazu1, Matsuda Zene1, Yokomaku Yoshiyuki1, Miyauchi Kosuke1, Nishizawa Masako1, Yamamoto Naoki12, Sugiura Wataru1
Affiliation:
1. AIDS Research Center, National Institute of Infectious Diseases, Tokyo, Japan 2. Department of Molecular Virology and Microbiology, Tokyo Medical and Dental University, Tokyo, Japan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Two new T-cell-based reporter cell lines were established to measure human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infectivity. One cell line naturally expresses CD4 and CXCR4, making it susceptible to X4-tropic viruses, and the other cell line, in which a CCR5 expression vector was introduced, is susceptible to both X4- and R5-tropic viruses. Reporter cells were constructed by transfecting the human T-cell line HPB-Ma, which demonstrates high susceptibility to HIV-1, with genomes expressing two different luciferase reporters, HIV-1 long terminal repeat-driven firefly luciferase and cytomegalovirus promoter-driven renilla luciferase. Upon HIV infection, the cells expressed firefly luciferase at levels that were highly correlated (
r
2
= 0.91 to 0.98) with the production of the capsid antigen p24. The cells also constitutively expressed renilla luciferase, which was used to monitor cell numbers and viability. The reliability of the cell lines for two in vitro applications, drug resistance phenotyping and drug screening, was confirmed. As HIV-1 efficiently replicated in these cells, they could be used for multiple-round replication assays as an alternative method to a single-cycle replication protocol. Coefficients of variation for drug susceptibility evaluated with the cell lines ranged from 17 to 41%. The new cell lines were beneficial for evaluating antiretroviral drug resistance. Firefly luciferase gave a wider dynamic range for evaluating virus infectivity, and the introduction of renilla luciferase improved assay reproducibility. The cell lines were also beneficial for screening new antiretroviral agents, as false inhibition caused by the cytotoxicity of test compounds was easily detected by monitoring renilla luciferase activity.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Microbiology (medical)
Reference40 articles.
1. Ait-Khaled, M., A. Rakik, P. Griffin, A. Cutrell, M. A. Fischl, N. Clumeck, S. B. Greenberg, R. Rubio, B. S. Peters, F. Pulido, J. Gould, G. Pearce, W. Spreen, M. Tisdale, and S. Lafon. 2002. Mutations in HIV-1 reverse transcriptase during therapy with abacavir, lamivudine and zidovudine in HIV-1-infected adults with no prior antiretroviral therapy. Antivir. Ther.7:43-51. 2. Baxter, J. D., D. L. Mayers, D. N. Wentworth, J. D. Neaton, M. L. Hoover, M. A. Winters, S. B. Mannheimer, M. A. Thompson, D. I. Abrams, B. J. Brizz, J. P. Ioannidis, T. C. Merigan, et al. 2000. A randomized study of antiretroviral management based on plasma genotypic antiretroviral resistance testing in patients failing therapy. AIDS14:F83-93. 3. Bento, F. M., D. Takeshita, C. B. Sacramento, T. R. Machado, M. B. Mathor, A. K. Carmona, and S. W. Han. 2004. Over expression of the selectable marker blasticidin S deaminase gene is toxic to human keratinocytes and murine BALB/MK cells. BMC Biotechnol.4:29. 4. Bosch, R. J., G. F. Downey, D. A. Katzenstein, N. Hellmann, L. Bacheler, and M. A. Albrecht. 2003. Evaluation of cutpoints for phenotypic hypersusceptibility to efavirenz. AIDS17:2395-2396. 5. Cingolani, A., A. Antinori, M. G. Rizzo, R. Murri, A. Ammassari, F. Baldini, S. Di Giambenedetto, R. Cauda, and A. De Luca. 2002. Usefulness of monitoring HIV drug resistance and adherence in individuals failing highly active antiretroviral therapy: a randomized study (ARGENTA). AIDS16:369-379.
Cited by
22 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|