Veterans Administration San Diego Healthcare System, San Diego, California, United States of America ; Department of Pathology, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California, United States of America.
Department of Infectious Diseases, Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, Australia.
PLoS Pathog. 2013;9(12):e1003834. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1003834. Epub 2013 Dec 26.
The possibility of HIV-1 eradication has been limited by the existence of latently infected cellular reservoirs. Studies to examine control of HIV latency and potential reactivation have been hindered by the small numbers of latently infected cells found in vivo. Major conceptual leaps have been facilitated by the use of latently infected T cell lines and primary cells. However, notable differences exist among cell model systems. Furthermore, screening efforts in specific cell models have identified drug candidates for "anti-latency" therapy, which often fail to reactivate HIV uniformly across different models. Therefore, the activity of a given drug candidate, demonstrated in a particular cellular model, cannot reliably predict its activity in other cell model systems or in infected patient cells, tested ex vivo. This situation represents a critical knowledge gap that adversely affects our ability to identify promising treatment compounds and hinders the advancement of drug testing into relevant animal models and clinical trials. To begin to understand the biological characteristics that are inherent to each HIV-1 latency model, we compared the response properties of five primary T cell models, four J-Lat cell models and those obtained with a viral outgrowth assay using patient-derived infected cells. A panel of thirteen stimuli that are known to reactivate HIV by defined mechanisms of action was selected and tested in parallel in all models. Our results indicate that no single in vitro cell model alone is able to capture accurately the ex vivo response characteristics of latently infected T cells from patients. Most cell models demonstrated that sensitivity to HIV reactivation was skewed toward or against specific drug classes. Protein kinase C agonists and PHA reactivated latent HIV uniformly across models, although drugs in most other classes did not.
HIV-1 根除的可能性受到潜伏感染细胞库的存在所限制。研究检查 HIV 潜伏期的控制和潜在的激活已受到体内发现的潜伏感染细胞数量少的阻碍。潜伏感染的 T 细胞系和原代细胞的使用促进了重大概念的飞跃。然而,细胞模型系统之间存在显著差异。此外,在特定细胞模型中的筛选工作已经确定了用于“抗潜伏”治疗的候选药物,这些药物通常不能在不同的模型中均匀地激活 HIV。因此,在特定细胞模型中证明的候选药物的活性不能可靠地预测其在其他细胞模型系统或在体外测试的感染患者细胞中的活性。这种情况代表了一个关键的知识差距,这对我们识别有前途的治疗化合物的能力产生不利影响,并阻碍了药物测试进入相关动物模型和临床试验的进展。为了开始了解每个 HIV-1 潜伏期模型固有的生物学特征,我们比较了五种原代 T 细胞模型、四种 J-Lat 细胞模型以及使用源自患者的感染细胞的病毒扩增测定获得的反应特性。选择了一组已知通过明确的作用机制激活 HIV 的十三种刺激物,并在所有模型中平行进行测试。我们的结果表明,没有单一的体外细胞模型能够准确地捕获来自患者的潜伏感染 T 细胞的体外反应特征。大多数细胞模型表明,对 HIV 再激活的敏感性偏向或反对特定的药物类别。蛋白激酶 C 激动剂和 PHA 均匀地在所有模型中重新激活潜伏的 HIV,尽管大多数其他类别的药物没有。