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Plasma antibodies from humans infected with zoonotic simian foamy virus do not inhibit cell-to-cell transmission of the virus despite binding to the surface of infected cells

Authors :
Mathilde Couteaudier
Thomas Montange
Richard Njouom
Chanceline Bilounga-Ndongo
Antoine Gessain
Florence Buseyne
Epidémiologie et Physiopathologie des Virus Oncogènes / Oncogenic Virus Epidemiology and Pathophysiology (EPVO (UMR_3569 / U-Pasteur_3))
Institut Pasteur [Paris] (IP)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Université Paris Cité (UPCité)
Centre Pasteur du Cameroun
Réseau International des Instituts Pasteur (RIIP)
Ministère de la Santé Publique [Yaoundé, Cameroun]
This work was supported by the Agence Nationale de la Recherche (REEMFOAMY project, ANR 15-CE-15-0008-01, A.G.), Institut Pasteur (PTR2020-353 ZOOFOAMENV, F.B.), and Agence Nationale de la Recherche (Grant Intra Labex, ANR-10-LABX62-IBEID, F.B.).
ANR-15-CE15-0008,REEMFOAMY,L'infection humaine par les virus foamy simiens zoonotiques : rôle des facteurs virologiques et immunologiques dans la restrcition de l'emergence virale(2015)
ANR-10-LABX-0062,IBEID,Integrative Biology of Emerging Infectious Diseases(2010)
Source :
PLoS Pathogens, PLoS Pathogens, 2022, 18 (5), pp.e1010470. ⟨10.1371/journal.ppat.1010470⟩
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Zoonotic simian foamy viruses (SFV) establish lifelong infection in their human hosts. Despite repeated transmission of SFV from nonhuman primates to humans, neither transmission between human hosts nor severe clinical manifestations have been reported. We aim to study the immune responses elicited by chronic infection with this retrovirus and previously reported that SFV-infected individuals generate potent neutralizing antibodies that block cell infection by viral particles. Here, we assessed whether human plasma antibodies block SFV cell-to-cell transmission and present the first description of cell-to-cell spreading of zoonotic gorilla SFV. We set-up a microtitration assay to quantify the ability of plasma samples from 20 Central African individuals infected with gorilla SFV and 9 uninfected controls to block cell-associated transmission of zoonotic gorilla SFV strains. We used flow-based cell cytometry and fluorescence microscopy to study envelope protein (Env) localization and the capacity of plasma antibodies to bind to infected cells. We visualized the cell-to-cell spread of SFV by real-time live imaging of a GFP-expressing prototype foamy virus (CI-PFV) strain. None of the samples neutralized cell-associated SFV infection, despite the inhibition of cell-free virus. We detected gorilla SFV Env in the perinuclear region, cytoplasmic vesicles and at the cell surface. We found that plasma antibodies bind to Env located at the surface of cells infected with primary gorilla SFV strains. Extracellular labeling of SFV proteins by human plasma samples showed patchy staining at the base of the cell and dense continuous staining at the cell apex, as well as staining in the intercellular connections that formed when previously connected cells separated from each other. In conclusion, SFV-specific antibodies from infected humans do not block cell-to-cell transmission, at leastin vitro, despite their capacity to bind to the surface of infected cells.Trial registration: Clinical trial registration:www.clinicaltrials.gov,https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03225794/.

Details

ISSN :
15537374 and 15537366
Volume :
18
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS pathogens
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....062c7f83ce1940f23de8d35a4adb0b21
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1010470⟩