PLoS ONE (Jan 2012)

HIV-1 expressing the envelopes of transmitted/founder or control/reference viruses have similar infection patterns of CD4 T-cells in human cervical tissue ex vivo.

  • Melanie Merbah,
  • Anush Arakelyan,
  • Tara Edmonds,
  • Christina Ochsenbauer,
  • John C Kappes,
  • Robin J Shattock,
  • Jean-Charles Grivel,
  • Leonid B Margolis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0050839
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 12
p. e50839

Abstract

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Recently, it was found that 80% of sexual HIV-1 transmissions are established by a single virion/viral genome. To investigate whether the transmitted/founder (T/F) viruses have specific biological properties favoring sexual transmission, we inoculated human cervical tissue explants with isogenic HIV-1 viruses encoding Env sequences from T/F and control reference (C/R) HIV-1 variants as well as with full length T/F HIV-1 and compared their replication efficiencies, T cell depletion, and the activation status of infected cells. We found that all the HIV-1 variants were capable of transmitting infection to cervical tissue ex vivo and in this system preferentially replicate in activated CD4 T cells and deplete these cells. There was no difference in the biological properties of T/F and C/R HIV-1 variants as evaluated in ex vivo cervical tissue.