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Antibodies That Neutralize SIVmac251 in T Lymphocytes Cause Interruption of the Viral Life Cycle in Macrophages by Preventing Nuclear Import of Viral DNA

Authors :
Wu Zhuge
Opendra Narayan
Fenglan Jia
Anil Kumar
Glenn A. Mackay
Source :
Virology. 287(2):436-445
Publication Year :
2001
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2001.

Abstract

Previous reports from our lab had shown that sera obtained from SIV mac -infected animals neutralized SIV mac infectivity in CD4 + T cells but failed to protect monkey primary macrophages from infection with the virus. However, the antibodies could inhibit completion of the viral life cycle in the macrophages at the postentry stage(s). In this report we examined the mechanisms of the late effect of the antibodies. Using monoclonal antibodies (MAbs), we demonstrated that only antibodies to the SIV envelope protein (KK17 and KK42) but not antibody to the viral core protein (FA2) had the same inhibitory effect as that of the anti-SIV sera. To identify the stage of the viral replication cycle that was inhibited by anti-SIV antibodies in macrophages, we used various PCR techniques to study viral entry/reverse transcription (by amplifying the viral gag gene), viral genome nuclear transport (by amplifying 2-LTR circular forms), viral integration (by Alu-PCR assay), and viral protein expression (by RIPA). We found that in macrophage cultures inoculated with SIV mac 251 that were preincubated with antienvelope MAbs, viral DNA was detected at 8 h postinoculation but the 2-LTR circular forms and integrated viral DNAs were undetectable, and viral proteins were not expressed in these infected macrophages. These results strongly suggested that anti-SIV antibodies inhibited SIV mac replication in macrophages by blocking nuclear transport of viral genomes since viral DNA could not be detected in the nuclei of treated cultures. Furthermore, we showed that although viral replication in macrophages was interrupted by the antibodies, when cocultured with permissive T cells, the viral genomes presented in the cytoplasm of the macrophages could readily transfer to T cells during cell–cell contact. Importantly, this transfer could not be prevented by the antibodies. These results might explain the failure of passive antibody immunization against SIV mac 251—a critical obstacle in AIDS vaccine development.

Details

ISSN :
00426822
Volume :
287
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Virology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f43df80e53cab98a42dc9b462e8665af
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1006/viro.2001.1053