HTLV-1 propels untransformed CD4+ lymphocytes into the cell cycle while protecting CD8+ cells from death

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Abstract

Human T cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1) infects both CD4+ and CD8+ lymphocytes, yet it induces adult T cell leukemia/lymphoma (ATLL) that is regularly of the CD4+ phenotype. Here we show that in vivo infected CD4+ and CD8+ T cells displayed similar patterns of clonal expansion in carriers without malignancy. Cloned infected cells from individuals without malignancy had a dramatic increase in spontaneous proliferation, which predominated in CD8+ lymphocytes and depended on the amount of tax mRNA. In fact, the clonal expansion of HTLV-1-positive CD8+ and CD4+ lymphocytes relied on 2 distinct mechanisms - infection prevented cell death in the former while recruiting the latter into the cell cycle. Cell cycling, but not apoptosis, depended on the level of viral-encoded tax expression. Infected tax-expressing CD4+ lymphocytes accumulated cellular defects characteristic of genetic instability. Therefore, HTLV-1 infection establishes a preleukemic phenotype that is restricted to CD4+ infected clones.

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APA

Sibon, D., Gabet, A. S., Zandecki, M., Pinatel, C., Thête, J., Delfau-Larue, M. H., … Wattel, E. (2006). HTLV-1 propels untransformed CD4+ lymphocytes into the cell cycle while protecting CD8+ cells from death. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 116(4), 974–983. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI27198

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