Productive, persistent infection of human colorectal cell lines with human immunodeficiency virus

  • Adachi A
  • Koenig S
  • Gendelman H
  • et al.
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Abstract

Thirteen adherent human non-lymphocyte cell lines were tested for their susceptibility to infection by human immunodeficiency virus. Productive infection could be demonstrated in three of five colorectal carcinoma cell lines examined; the other eight human non-lymphocyte cell lines were uninfectible. A susceptible colon carcinoma cell line (HT29), as well as normal colonic mucosa, was shown to contain a 3.0-kilobase species of poly(A)+ CD4 RNA, whereas uninfectible colon carcinoma and rhabdomyosarcoma cell lines synthesized no detectable T4 RNA. A persistently infected colon carcinoma cell line was established that continued to produce progeny human immunodeficiency virus for more than 10 weeks postinfection.

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Adachi, A., Koenig, S., Gendelman, H. E., Daugherty, D., Gattoni-Celli, S., Fauci, A. S., & Martin, M. A. (1987). Productive, persistent infection of human colorectal cell lines with human immunodeficiency virus. Journal of Virology, 61(1), 209–213. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.61.1.209-213.1987

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