Production of HIV-1 by human B cells infected in vitro: Characterization of an EBV genome-negative B cell line chronically synthetizing a low level of HIV-1 after infection

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Abstract

Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) has tropism for helper T lymphocytes and cells of the monocyte/macrophage lineages. HIV-1 can also infect other cell types, including B cells. We show here that 10% of fresh circulating B cells from HIV-1-seronegative donors (i) express the CD4 receptor and CCR5 and CXCR4, two recently described coreceptors for HIV-1 and (ii) are permissive to HIV-1 with de novo proviral DNA integration following ex vivo infection by either SI (syncytium-inducing) or NSI (non-syncytium- inducing) isolates. To get further information on the interaction between HIV and B cells, the susceptibility of several EBV-positive or -negative B cell lines to infection by SI and NSI isolates was checked. Following infection of an EBV- CD4+ CXCR4+ CCR5- B cell line (DG75) by an SI HIV-1 isolate, we obtained a cell line which chronically produced low-level infectious HIV-1 for 2 years (HIV-DG75). Immunocytochemical data, combined with in situ PCR data, established that HIV-DG75 cells consist of at least three populations: uninfected cells, infected virus-producing cells, and infected but nonproducing cells. Moreover, HIV-DG75 cells which express p24 antigen do not go into apoptosis, contrary to T lymphocytes. We infer from these results that B cells could constitute a reservoir of infectious virus in infected patients.

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Fritsch, L., Marechal, V., Schneider, V., Barthet, C., Rozenbaum, W., Moisan-Coppey, M. Î., … Nicolas, J. C. (1998). Production of HIV-1 by human B cells infected in vitro: Characterization of an EBV genome-negative B cell line chronically synthetizing a low level of HIV-1 after infection. Virology, 244(2), 542–551. https://doi.org/10.1006/viro.1998.9120

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