Productive Infection of Neonatal CD8+ T Lymphocytes by HIV-1

Author:

Yang Liang Peng11,Riley James L.1,Carroll Richard G.1,June Carl H.1,Hoxie James1,Patterson Bruce K.1,Ohshima Yusei1,Hodes Richard J.1,Delespesse Guy1

Affiliation:

1. From the University of Montreal, Centre de Recherche Louis-Charles Simard, Hôpital Notre-Dame, Montreal, Quebec H2L 4M1, Canada; the Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine, Bethesda, Maryland 20889; the Division of Retrovirology, Walter Reed Army Institute for Research, Rockville, Maryland 20850; the Experimental Immunology Branch, National Institutes of Health, Beth

Abstract

CD8+ T lymphocytes confer significant but ultimately insufficient protection against HIV infection. Here we report that activated neonatal CD8+ T cells can be productively infected in vitro by macrophage-tropic (M-tropic) HIV-1 isolates, which are responsible for disease transmission, whereas they are resistant to T cell–tropic (T-tropic) HIV strains. Physiological activation of CD8-α/β+ CD4− T cell receptor–α/β+ neonatal T cells, including activation by allogeneic dendritic cells, induces the accumulation of CD4 messenger RNA and the expression of CD4 Ag on the cell surface. The large majority of anti-CD3/B7.1–activated cord blood CD8+ T cells coexpress CD4, the primary HIV receptor, as well as CCR5 and CXCR4, the coreceptors used by M- and T-tropic HIV-1 strains, respectively, to enter target cells. These findings are relevant to the rapid progression of neonatal HIV infection. Infection of primary HIV-specific CD8+ T cells may compromise their survival and thus significantly contribute to the failure of the immune system to control the infection. Furthermore, these results indicate a previously unsuspected level of plasticity in the neonatal immune system in the regulation of CD4 expression by costimulation.

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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