Abstract

BackgroundHIV-1 can infect and replicate in both CD4 T cells and macrophages. In these cell types, HIV-1 entry is mediated by the binding of envelope glycoproteins (gp120 and gp41, Env) to the receptor CD4 and a coreceptor, principally CCR5 or CXCR4, depending on the viral strain (R5 or X4, respectively). Uninfected CD4 T cells undergo X4 Env-mediated autophagy, leading to their apoptosis, a mechanism now recognized as central to immunodeficiency.Methodology/Principal FindingsWe demonstrate here that autophagy and cell death are also induced in the uninfected CD4 T cells by HIV-1 R5 Env, while autophagy is inhibited in productively X4 or R5-infected CD4 T cells. In contrast, uninfected macrophages, a preserved cell population during HIV-1 infection, do not undergo X4 or R5 Env-mediated autophagy. Autophagosomes, however, are present in macrophages exposed to infectious HIV-1 particles, independently of coreceptor use. Interestingly, we observed two populations of autophagic cells: one highly autophagic and the other weakly autophagic. Surprisingly, viruses could be detected in the weakly autophagic cells but not in the highly autophagic cells. In addition, we show that the triggering of autophagy in macrophages is necessary for viral replication but addition of Bafilomycin A1, which blocks the final stages of autophagy, strongly increases productive infection.Conclusions/SignificanceTaken together, our data suggest that autophagy plays a complex, but essential, role in HIV pathology by regulating both viral replication and the fate of the target cells.

Highlights

  • HIV-1 can infect and replicate in both CD4 T cells and macrophages, only CD4 T lymphocytes are depleted during HIV-1 infection

  • We have previously demonstrated that, independently of HIV-1 replication, Env-transfected or HIV-1-infected cells, both of which express X4 Env at the cell surface, induce autophagy in uninfected CD4 T lymphocytes via the fusogenic function of gp41 [9]

  • During HIV-1 productive infection, we demonstrate that autophagy is repressed in CD4 T cells but induced and regulated in macrophages

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Summary

Introduction

HIV-1 can infect and replicate in both CD4 T cells and macrophages, only CD4 T lymphocytes are depleted during HIV-1 infection. R5 strains, which use CCR5 for entry, are responsible for the primary infection while X4 strains, which use CXCR4, emerge later in the course of infection and are associated with a severe depletion of CD4 T cells [2] Infection by both cell-free viruses and by cell-to-cell contact between infected and uninfected cells, involving the formation of virological synapses, leads to the spread of HIV. HIV-1 can infect and replicate in both CD4 T cells and macrophages In these cell types, HIV-1 entry is mediated by the binding of envelope glycoproteins (gp120 and gp, Env) to the receptor CD4 and a coreceptor, principally CCR5 or CXCR4, depending on the viral strain (R5 or X4, respectively). Uninfected CD4 T cells undergo X4 Env-mediated autophagy, leading to their apoptosis, a mechanism recognized as central to immunodeficiency

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