Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3415852 Microbes and Infection 2006 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

Superinfection with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) in human subjects, defined as reinfection with a heterologous strain of HIV-1, has become a topic of great interest. To illustrate the significance of this occurrence, we performed HIV-1 superinfection of L-2 cells, which were isolated from MT-4 cells persistently infected with subtype B HIV-1 as a cell clone continuously producing defective HIV-1 particles. L-2 cells carrying provirus with a one-base insertion in the pol protease were superinfected with HIV-1 derived from primary isolates of subtype B or CRF01_AE. The kinetics of the superinfection in L-2 were very slow compared with those of primary infections in MT-4. Interestingly, L-2 shifted after superinfection to become a producer of highly cytopathogenic HIV-1. Molecular characterization revealed that superinfection occurred in only about 10% of the CRF01_AE-superinfected L-2, which carried provirus of both subtypes and produced viral particles containing genomic RNA of both subtypes. Surprisingly, such cytopathogenic HIV-1 showed predominantly the original subtype B phenotype. Thus, the mechanism of the production of cytopathic HIV-1 seemed to be mediated by trans complementation with pol products of superinfected CRF01_AE. These findings suggest the significance of long-lived infected cells as recipients for superinfection that could result in the generation of new HIV-1 variants with high virulence in patients who are off therapy or do not adhere to treatment, and may indicate the need for precautions against such superinfection.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Immunology and Microbiology Immunology
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