Cell Reports (Feb 2017)

Astrocytes Resist HIV-1 Fusion but Engulf Infected Macrophage Material

  • Rebecca A. Russell,
  • Jakub Chojnacki,
  • Daniel M. Jones,
  • Errin Johnson,
  • Thao Do,
  • Christian Eggeling,
  • Sergi Padilla-Parra,
  • Quentin J. Sattentau

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2017.01.027
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 6
pp. 1473 – 1483

Abstract

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HIV-1 disseminates to diverse tissues and establishes long-lived viral reservoirs. These reservoirs include the CNS, in which macrophage-lineage cells, and as suggested by many studies, astrocytes, may be infected. Here, we have investigated astrocyte infection by HIV-1. We confirm that astrocytes trap and internalize HIV-1 particles for subsequent release but find no evidence that these particles infect the cell. Astrocyte infection was not observed by cell-free or cell-to-cell routes using diverse approaches, including luciferase and GFP reporter viruses, fixed and live-cell fusion assays, multispectral flow cytometry, and super-resolution imaging. By contrast, we observed intimate interactions between HIV-1-infected macrophages and astrocytes leading to signals that might be mistaken for astrocyte infection using less stringent approaches. These results have implications for HIV-1 infection of the CNS, viral reservoir formation, and antiretroviral therapy.

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