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J. Virol., Nov 1996, 7992-8002, Vol 70, No. 11
M Shahabuddin, G Bentsman, B Volsky, I Rodriguez and DJ Volsky
We characterized in detail the life cycle of human immunodeficiency virus
type 1 (HIV-1) in human glioma H4/CD4 cells which stably express
transfected CD4 DNA (B. Volsky, K. Sakai, M. Reddy, and D. J. Volsky,
Virology 186:303-308, 1992). Infection of cloned H4/CD4 cells with the N1T
strain of cell-free HIV-1 (HIV-1/N1T) was rapid and highly productive as
measured by the initial expression of viral DNA, RNA, and protein, but all
viral products declined to low levels by 14 days after infection.
Chronically infected, virus-producing H4/CD4 cells could be obtained by
cell cloning, indicating that HIV-1 DNA can integrate and remain expressed
in these cells. The HIV-1 produced in H4/CD4 cells was noninfectious to
glial cells, but it could be transmitted with low efficiency to CEM cells.
Examination of viral protein composition by immunoprecipitation with AIDS
serum or anti-gp120 antibody revealed that HIV-1/N1T-infected H4/CD4 cells
produced all major viral proteins including gp160, but not gp120.
Deglycosylation experiments with three different glycosidases determined
that the absence of gp120 was not due to aberrant glycosylation of gp160,
indicating a defect in gp160 proteolytic processing. Similar results were
obtained in acutely and chronically infected H4/CD4 cells. To determine the
generality of this HIV-1 replication phenotype in H4/CD4 cells, nine
different viral clones were tested for replication in H4/CD4 cells by
transfection. Eight were transiently productive like N1T, but one clone,
NL4-3, established a long-lived productive infection in H4/CD4 cells,
produced infectious progeny virus, and produced both gp160 and gp120. We
conclude that for most HIV-1 strains tested, HIV-1 infection of H4/CD4 is
restricted to a single cycle because of the defective processing of gp160,
resulting in the absence of gp120 on progeny virus.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
A mechanism of restricted human immunodeficiency virus type 1 expression in human glial cells
Molecular Virology Laboratory, St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center, New York, New York 10019, USA.
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