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Longitudinal analysis of subtype C envelope tropism for memory CD4+T cell subsets over the first 3 years of untreated HIV-1 infection

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 13:46 authored by Matthew Gartner, Paul Gorry, Carolin Tumpach, Jingling ZhouJingling Zhou, Ashanti Dantanarayana, J. Chang, Thomas AngelovichThomas Angelovich, Paula Ellenberg, Annemarie Laumaea, Molati Nonyane, Penny Moore, Sharon Lewin, Melissa ChurchillMelissa Churchill, Jacqueline Flynn, Michael RocheMichael Roche
Background: HIV-1 infects a wide range of CD4+ T cells with different phenotypic properties and differing expression levels of entry coreceptors. We sought to determine the viral tropism of subtype C (C-HIV) Envelope (Env) clones for different CD4+ T cell subsets and whether tropism changes during acute to chronic disease progression. HIV-1 envs were amplified from the plasma of five C-HIV infected women from three untreated time points; less than 2 months, 1-year and 3-years post-infection. Pseudoviruses were generated from Env clones, phenotyped for coreceptor usage and CD4+ T cell subset tropism was measured by flow cytometry. Results: A total of 50 C-HIV envs were cloned and screened for functionality in pseudovirus infection assays. Phylogenetic and variable region characteristic analysis demonstrated evolution in envs between time points. We found 45 pseudoviruses were functional and all used CCR5 to mediate entry into NP2/CD4/CCR5 cells. In vitro infection assays showed transitional memory (TM) and effector memory (EM) CD4+ T cells were more frequently infected (median: 46% and 25% of total infected CD4+ T cells respectively) than naïve, stem cell memory, central memory and terminally differentiated cells. This was not due to these subsets contributing a higher proportion of the CD4+ T cell pool, rather these subsets were more susceptible to infection (median: 5.38% EM and 2.15% TM cells infected), consistent with heightened CCR5 expression on EM and TM cells. No inter- or intra-participant changes in CD4+ T cell subset tropism were observed across the three-time points. Conclusions: CD4+ T cell subsets that express more CCR5 were more susceptible to infection with C-HIV Envs, suggesting that these may be the major cellular targets during the first 3 years of infection. Moreover, we found that viral tropism for different CD4+ T cell subsets in vitro did not change between Envs cloned from acute to chronic disease stages. Finally, central memory, naïve and ste

History

Journal

Retrovirology

Volume

17

Number

24

Issue

1

Start page

1

End page

15

Total pages

15

Publisher

BioMed Central

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© The Author(s) 2020. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Former Identifier

2006101472

Esploro creation date

2022-11-25

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