Abstract

Over a 4-year period, infectious human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) has been recovered from cultured peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of virus-infected animals only intermittently and at relatively low titers. In examining the possible mechanism for this observation, CD4+ cells or CD8+ cells were removed by panning from the PBMC before culture. A dramatic increase in frequency of HIV-1 recovery as well as in the level of virus replication was observed in the CD4+ cell-enriched or CD8+ cell-depleted cultures of PBMC from 3 3 infected animals. Moreover, addition of purified CD8+ effector cells from all 6 HIV-infected and 5 10 uninfected animals to an equal number of HIV-1 acutely infected purified CD4+ target cells resulted in 75–100% suppression of virus production. CD8+ cells from 3 additional uninfected animals caused delayed replication kinetics and moderate to low suppression of peak virus production. These findings contrast with the previously recognized absence of this HIV-1-suppressing activity of CD8+ cells from seronegative humans. This CD8+ cell-mediated suppression of viral replication could help explain the natural resistance of chimpanzees to HIV-induced disease.

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