Increased Neutralization Sensitivity and Reduced Replicative Capacity of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 after Short-Term In Vivo or In Vitro Passage through Chimpanzees

Author:

Beaumont Tim12,Broersen Silvia12,van Nuenen Ad12,Huisman Han G.32,de Roda Husman Ana-Maria12,Heeney Jonathan L.4,Schuitemaker Hanneke12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical Viro-Immunology1 and

2. Laboratory for Experimental and Clinical Immunology, University of Amsterdam, Academic Medical Center,2Amsterdam, and

3. Department of Pathophysiology of Plasma Proteins,3 CLB, and

4. Department of Virology, Biomedical Primate Research Centre, Rijswijk,4 The Netherlands

Abstract

ABSTRACT Development of disease is extremely rare in chimpanzees when inoculated with either T-cell-line-adapted neutralization-sensitive or primary human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), at first excluding a role for HIV-1 neutralization sensitivity in the clinical course of infection. Interestingly, we observed that short-term in vivo and in vitro passage of primary HIV-1 isolates through chimpanzee peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) resulted in a neutralization-sensitive phenotype. Furthermore, an HIV-1 variant reisolated from a chimpanzee 10 years after experimental infection was still sensitive to neutralization by soluble CD4, the CD4 binding site recognizing antibody IgG1b12 and autologous chimpanzee serum samples, but had become relatively resistant to neutralization by polyclonal human sera and neutralizing monoclonal antibodies. The initial adaptation of HIV-1 to replicate in chimpanzee PBMC seemed to coincide with a selection for viruses with low replicative kinetics. Neither coreceptor usage nor the expression level of CD4, CCR5, or CXCR4 on chimpanzee PBMC compared to human cells could explain the phenotypic changes observed in these chimpanzee-passaged viruses. Our data suggest that the increased neutralization sensitivity of HIV-1 after replication in chimpanzee cells may in part contribute to the long-term asymptomatic HIV-1 infection in experimentally infected chimpanzees.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology

Reference68 articles.

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