Abstract

Macrophages are susceptible to HIV infection and play an important role in viral dissemination through cell-cell contacts with T cells. However, our current understanding of macrophage-to-T cell HIV transmission is derived from studies that do not consider the robust migration and cell-cell interaction dynamics between these cells. Here, we performed live-cell imaging studies in 3-dimensional (3D) collagen that allowed CD4+ T cells to migrate and to locate and engage HIV-infected macrophages, modeling the dynamic aspects of the in situ environment in which these contacts frequently occur. We show that HIV+ macrophages form stable contacts with CD4+ T cells that are facilitated by both gp120-CD4 and LFA-1-ICAM-1 interactions and that prolonged contacts are a prerequisite for efficient viral spread. LFA-1-ICAM-1 adhesive contacts function to restrain highly motile T cells, since their blockade substantially destabilized macrophage-T cell contacts, resulting in abnormal tethering events that reduced cell-cell viral spread. HIV-infected macrophages displayed strikingly elongated podosomal extensions that were dependent on Nef expression but were dispensable for stable cell-cell contact formation. Finally, we observed persistent T cell infection in dynamic monocyte-derived macrophage (MDM)-T cell cocultures in the presence of single high antiretroviral drug concentrations but achieved complete inhibition with combination therapy. Together, our data implicate macrophages as drivers of T cell infection by altering physiological MDM-T cell contact dynamics to access and restrain large numbers of susceptible, motile T cells within lymphoid tissues.IMPORTANCE Once HIV enters the lymphoid organs, exponential viral replication in T cells ensues. Given the densely packed nature of these tissues, where infected and uninfected cells are in nearly constant contact with one another, efficient HIV spread is thought to occur through cell-cell contacts in vivo However, this has not been formally demonstrated. In this study, we performed live-cell imaging studies within a 3-dimensional space to recapitulate the dynamic aspects of the lymphoid microenvironment and asked whether HIV can alter the morphology, migration capacity, and cell-cell contact behaviors between macrophages and T cells. We show that HIV-infected macrophages can engage T cells in stable contacts through binding of virus- and host-derived adhesive molecules and that stable macrophage-T cell contacts were required for high viral spread. Thus, HIV alters physiological macrophage-T cell interactions in order to access and restrain large numbers of susceptible, motile T cells, thereby playing an important role in HIV progression.

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