Abstract

ABSTRACTProfessional antigen-presenting cells (APC; myeloid dendritic cells [DC] and macrophages [MΦ]; B lymphocytes) mediate highly efficient HIV-1 infection of CD4+ T cells, termed trans infection, that could contribute to HIV-1 pathogenesis. We have previously shown that lower cholesterol content in DC and B lymphocytes is associated with a lack of HIV-1 trans infection in HIV-1-infected nonprogressors (NP). Here, we assessed whether HIV-1 trans infection mediated by another major APC, MΦ, is deficient in NP due to altered cholesterol metabolism. When comparing healthy HIV-1 seronegatives (SN), rapid progressors (PR), and NP, we found that monocyte-derived MΦ from NP did not mediate HIV-1 trans infection of autologous CD4+ T cells, in contrast to efficient trans infection mediated by SN and PR MΦ. MΦ trans infection efficiency was directly associated with the number of DC-specific intercellular adhesion molecule-3-grabbing nonintegrin (DC-SIGN)-expressing MΦ. Significantly fewer NP MΦ expressed DC-SIGN. Unesterified (free) cholesterol in MΦ cell membranes and lipid rafting was significantly lower in NP than PR, as was virus internalization in early endosomes. Furthermore, simvastatin (SIMV) decreased the subpopulation of DC-SIGN+ MΦ as well as cis and trans infection. Notably, SIMV decreased cell membrane cholesterol and led to lipid raft dissociation, effectively mimicking the incompetent APC trans infection environment characteristic of NP. Our data support that DC-SIGN and membrane cholesterol are central to MΦ trans infection, and a lack of these limits HIV-1 disease progression. Targeting the ability of MΦ to drive HIV-1 dissemination in trans could enhance HIV-1 therapeutic strategies.IMPORTANCE Despite the success of combination antiretroviral therapy, neither a vaccine nor a cure for HIV infection has been developed, demonstrating a need for novel prophylactic and therapeutic strategies. Here, we show that efficiency of MΦ-mediated HIV trans infection of CD4+ T cells is a unique characteristic associated with control of disease progression, and it is impaired in HIV-infected NP. In vitro treatment of MΦ from healthy donors with SIMV lowers their cholesterol content, which results in a strongly reduced trans infection ability, similar to the levels of MΦ from NP. Taken together, our data support the hypothesis that MΦ-mediated HIV-1 trans infection plays a role in HIV infection and disease progression and demonstrate that the use of SIMV to decrease this mechanism of virus transfer should be considered for future HIV therapeutic development.

Highlights

  • Professional antigen-presenting cells (APC; myeloid dendritic cells [DC] and macrophages [M⌽]; B lymphocytes) mediate highly efficient HIV-1 infection of CD4ϩ T cells, termed trans infection, that could contribute to HIV-1 pathogenesis

  • To establish our model for assessing HIV-1 trans infection mediated by M⌽, we cultured monocyte-derived M⌽ from 10 SN recruited from the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study (MACS) (Table 1)

  • As we have found in B cells and DC [10], the mechanism of poor M⌽ trans infection of autologous CD4ϩ T cells is a result of altered cell cholesterol homeostasis

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Summary

Introduction

Professional antigen-presenting cells (APC; myeloid dendritic cells [DC] and macrophages [M⌽]; B lymphocytes) mediate highly efficient HIV-1 infection of CD4ϩ T cells, termed trans infection, that could contribute to HIV-1 pathogenesis. These data suggest that the lack of M⌽-mediated trans infection seen in NP is associated with the number of M⌽ expressing DC-SIGN, a protein known to be involved in HIV-1 attachment [18, 21] and endocytosis [22]. Blocking DC-SIGN on M⌽ prior to virus exposure and coculture with autologous CD4ϩ T cells reduced M⌽ trans infection by 87% by day 12 (Fig. 5C).

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