HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins isolated from Viremic Non- Progressor individuals are fully functional and cytopathic.
Autor
Valenzuela Fernández, Agustín; Cabrera Rodríguez, Romina; Hebmann, Veronique; Marfil, Silvia; Pernas, María; Marrero Hernández, Sara; Cabrera, Cecilia; Urrea, Victor; Casado, Concepción; Olivares, Isabel; Márquez Arce, Daniel; Pérez Yanes, Silvia; Estévez Herrera, Judith; Clotet, Bonaventura; Espert, Lucile; López Galíndez, Cecilio; Biard-Piechaczyk, Martine; Blanco, JuliàFecha
2019Resumen
In untreated HIV-1-infected individuals, viremia is positively associated with disease progression.
However, some viremic non progressors (VNPs) individuals show paradoxical high CD4+ T cell counts.
HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein complex (Env) is a major cytopathic determinant in viral replication;
therefore, we have deeply characterized Env function in this rare clinical phenotype. Full-length Env
clones isolated from individuals with Viral Load (VL) > 10,000 copies/mL classifed as VNPs (n=15)
or rapid progressors (RPs, n=17) were geno- and phenotypically analyzed by determining diversity,
expression, CD4 binding/signaling, fusogenicity, infectivity and autophagy induction. Selected Env
clones from VNPs and RPs (n=32) showed similar expression, fusion and infection abilities. Env clones
from both groups showed similar afnity for CD4 during cell-to-cell transmission and consistently
induced similar levels of CD4 signaling, measured by α-tubulin acetylation. Moreover, we demonstrate
for the frst time that primary Env clones from VNP and RP induce autophagy in uninfected cells and
that this feature correlated with fusogenic capacity but was unrelated to disease progression. In
conclusion, our data suggest that Env clones from VNP individuals are fully functional. Therefore, the
paradoxical CD4+ T cell count stability coexisting with high levels of viral replication is unrelated to Env
function.