Abstract

The purpose of this study was to characterize the ultrastructure of lymphoid tissue from HIV/AIDS patients and to evaluate it as a reservoir and source of HIV. HIV has been demonstrated in lymph nodes and tonsils and adenoids, by immunohistochemistry (IHC), in situ hybridization (ISH), and transmission electron microscopy (TEM), to be associated with germinal center (GC) follicular dendritic cells (FDC). The presence of HIV in the larger gastrointestinal tract-associated lymphoid tissue (GALT) has been much less studied. Whether FDC themselves are productively infected by HIV in any of the lymphoid sites is controversial. Lymph nodes, tonsils, and gastrointestinal biopsies were fixed in neutral buffered glutaraldehyde and prepared for TEM. Mature HIV particles were abundant in GC of hyperplastic lymph nodes, tonsils, and the GALT. They were enmeshed within an electron-dense matrix associated with an all-encompassing branching FDC network of processes. HIV particles were seen budding from both FDC and lymphocytes. The greatest numbers of particles were seen in hyperplastic lymphoid tissue from untreated individuals and in lymph nodes co-infected with opportunistic organisms, such as Mycobacterium aviumcomplex. In addition to HIV, unidentifiable “particles” of varying sizes, possibly including other viruses, were regularly seen in association with FDC. Ultrastructural study graphically demonstrated the abundance of HIV particles associated with the complex FDC network of hyperplastic lymph nodes, tonsils, and GALT. HIV was shown to productively infect FDC, as well as lymphocytes.

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