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J Virol, May 1998, p. 3872-3886, Vol. 72, No. 5
0022-538X/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Simian Immunodeficiency Virus Replicates to High
Levels in Sooty Mangabeys without Inducing Disease
Marie-Anne
Rey-Cuillé,1,
Jean-Luc
Berthier,2
Marie-Claude
Bomsel-Demontoy,2
Yves
Chaduc,2
Luc
Montagnier,3
Ara G.
Hovanessian,1 and
Lisa A.
Chakrabarti3,*
Virologie et Immunologie
Cellulaire1 and
Oncologie Virale (ERS
CNRS 572),3 Institut Pasteur, 75724 Paris
cedex 15, and
Museum National d'Histoire
Naturelle,2 75005 Paris, France
Received 11 September 1997/Accepted 21 January 1998
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ABSTRACT |
A serologic survey of primates living in a French zoo allowed
identification of three cases of infection with simian immunodeficiency virus in sooty mangabeys (Cercocebus atys) (SIVsm). Viral
isolates, which were designated SIVsmFr66, SIVsmFr74, and
SIVsmFr85, were obtained after short-term culture of mangabey lymphoid
cells. Phylogenetic analysis of gag and env
sequences amplified directly from mangabey tissues showed that the
three SIVsmFr were genetically close and that they constituted a
new subtype within the diverse SIVsm-SIVmac-human
immunodeficiency virus type 2 (HIV-2) group. We could reconstruct the
transmission events that likely occurred in 1986 between the three
animals and evaluate the divergence of SIVsmFr sequences since
transmission. The estimated rate of mutation fixation was 6 × 10
3 substitutions per site per year, which was as high as
the rate found for SIVmac infection in macaques. These data indicated
that SIVsmFr replicated at a high rate in mangabeys, despite the
nonpathogenic character of infection in this host. The viral load
evaluated by competitive PCR reached 20,000 viral DNA copies per
106 lymph node cells. In addition, productively infected
cells were readily detected in mangabey lymphoid tissues by in situ
hybridization. The amounts of viral RNA in plasma ranged from
105 to 107 copies per ml. The cell-associated
and plasma viral loads were as high as those seen in susceptible hosts
(humans or macaques) during the asymptomatic stage of HIV or
SIVmac infections. Thus, the lack of pathogenicity of SIVsm
for its natural host cannot be explained by limited viral replication
or by tight containment of viral production.
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INTRODUCTION |
Simian immunodeficiency viruses
(SIV) naturally infect a variety of nonhuman primates of African origin
(33, 53). SIV seroprevalence is particularly high in African
green monkey (Cercopithecus aethiops) populations and in
some troops of sooty mangabeys (Cercocebus atys atys)
(15, 38, 43, 47, 55). Although SIV share many structural and
biological properties with human immunodeficiency viruses (HIV), they
do not seem to induce AIDS in their natural hosts (3, 20, 22, 23,
34, 37, 61). In contrast, SIV from sooty mangabey (SIVsm) induces
an immunodeficiency syndrome very similar to AIDS when it is
experimentally inoculated in Asian monkey species such as macaques
(24, 51, 71). Accidental transmission of SIVsm from
mangabeys to macaques housed in primate centers resulted in the
emergence of the SIVmac that caused simian AIDS outbreaks during the
1970s (12, 17, 27). The characterization of an SIV strain
from African green monkey (SIVagm) that causes disease in pig-tailed
macaques (Macaca nemestrina) further suggests that primate
lentiviruses occasionally become pathogenic when transmitted to a new
species (31). The AIDS viruses HIV HIV-1 and HIV-2 may well
be the result of several accidental transmissions of SIV to humans. The
evidence for a simian origin of HIV-2 is compelling, since the SIVsm
genome is closely related to that of HIV-2 and since the HIV-2 endemic
zone in West Africa corresponds to the natural range of SIVsm-carrying
sooty mangabeys (26, 34, 47). Several clusters on the
HIV-2-SIVsm phylogenetic tree group human and simian viruses together,
implying that multiple independent transmission events gave rise to the
different HIV-2 subtypes (15, 25). The origins of HIV-1 are
less clear, but the genetic proximity of divergent HIV-1 strains with a
lentivirus isolated from chimpanzees (SIVcpz) favors the idea that
HIV-1 infection also originated as a zoonosis (35, 52, 60).
Both viral and host factors have been shown to control SIV pathogenic
potential. A major viral determinant of virulence is the protein Nef,
which is essential to disease induction in adult macaques and which
contributes to the phenotype of a hyperpathogenic strain of SIVsm named
PBj14 (18, 21, 40). Host determinants are less well
characterized but clearly play a role, since a SIV molecular clone can
induce disease in one species and a chronic but benign infection in
another species (31). The antiviral immune response differs
in monkeys susceptible or resistant to disease, but the relevance of
these differences to the pathogenic process is not yet known (24,
54, 71). The viral load, which is the amount of virus that
persists in the organism as a result of viral production minus viral
clearance, is thought to be an important determinant of SIV and HIV
pathogenicity. A positive correlation between the viral load early in
infection and the risk of progression to disease seems to be the rule
in SIVmac, SIVagm, and HIV-1 infections (29, 31, 32, 46,
72). To verify whether this rule holds true for every type of SIV
infection, we investigated virologic and phylogenetic parameters in
naturally infected sooty mangabeys.
The present study reports the characterization of a novel SIVsm subtype
isolated from a group of three mangabeys. Since the animals likely
belonged to the same infection chain, it was possible to evaluate the
number of mutations that had accumulated in viral sequences since
transmission. The rate of mutation fixation was found to be high in
both gag and env (TM) regions, which suggested that SIVsm replicated rapidly and continuously in vivo. In addition, disease-resistant mangabeys were found to harbor as much virus as hosts
susceptible to the pathogenic effects of SIV and HIV infections. These
findings indicated that neither the viral load nor the viral
replication rate was predictive of SIVsm pathogenicity.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animals.
Nonhuman primates of the Ménagerie du Museum
National d'Histoire Naturelle in Paris, France, were tested for
immunological reactivity with HIV-1 and HIV-2 antigens. Serum samples
were collected over a period of 10 years (from 1987 to 1997) and kept
frozen at
30°C until they were tested by Western blotting. Three
sooty mangabeys (C. atys atys, formerly known as
Cercocebus torquatus atys) had antibodies that reacted with
HIV-2 antigens. Two of them, M66 and F74, were a male and a female that
had been living in the same group for 22 years. These animals were wild
caught and of unknown geographical origin. The younger seropositive
mangabey, F85, was a female born in captivity in a London zoo. She was
introduced into the group of M66 and F74 in November 1985 but had to be
isolated after being bitten during a violent fight with other females. F85 was transferred to another zoo in October 1986 to be paired with
male M78. Although both animals had been kept together for 10 years,
M78 was seronegative at the time of testing. None of the mangabeys
studied manifested clinical signs, except for an arthritic condition
associated with old age in M66.
Virus isolation.
Blood samples collected in sodium citrate
coated tubes were obtained for the three seropositive animals and from
M78. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were separated by
gradient centrifugation on Ficoll-Hypaque and were cultivated at a
concentration of 106/ml in RPMI medium supplemented with
10% of a supernatant enriched in human interleukin-2 (IL-2;
Lymphocult-T-LF; Biotest AG). The mitogen phytohemaglutinin (PHA) was
added at a concentration of 5 µg/ml. After 2 days, PHA-stimulated
human PBMC were added to the cultures. The cocultures were monitored
for SIV production by an antigen-capture assay specific for SIV p27 Gag
(Coulter). Peripheral and mesenteric lymph nodes were obtained at
necropsy from animals F74, F85, and M78. Lymph nodes were disrupted in RPMI medium by passage through metal grids until a homogeneous suspension was obtained. Half of the lymph node cells (LNC) from F74
were depleted of CD8+ cells by using an anti-CD8 antibody
directly coupled to magnetic beads according to the recommendations
manufacturer of the (Immunotech, Marseille, France). The efficiency of
the depletion was monitored by flow cytometric analysis with the Leu2a
antibody coupled to R-phycoerythrin (Becton Dickinson). Less than 2%
of the LNC remained CD8+ positive after depletion. The
culture conditions for LNC were the same as those used for PBMC.
Western blotting.
Western blot analysis was performed with
extracts from CEMx174 cells infected with HIV-2 ROD, SIVsmFr, and
SIVmac 251. Briefly, 107 cells were pelleted and
resuspended in 100 µl of buffer containing 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.6),
150 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 0.2 mM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, and 100 U
of aprotinin (Iniprol; Choay) before the addition of 100 µl of the
same buffer containing 2% (vol/vol) Triton X-100 (lysis buffer). Cell
extracts were centrifuged at 12,000 × g for 10 min,
and the supernatants were stored at
80°C until use. To prepare
protein extracts from viral pellets, the supernatants of infected
cultures were first centrifuged at 12,000 × g for 10 min before high-speed centrifugation at 100,000 × g
for 15 min in a Beckman TL100 centrifuge. The virus pellet obtained
from a culture of 107 cells was solubilized in 200 µl of
lysis buffer. Viral proteins were separated by sodium dodecyl
sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and transferred
onto nitrocellulose membranes as previously described (65).
The blots were incubated in 5% nonfat milk in phosphate-buffered
saline to block nonspecific binding sites and were then incubated for
2 h at room temperature (r.t.) with each monoclonal antibody (MAb)
at a concentration of 5 µg/ml in phosphate-buffered saline containing
10% fetal calf serum. The viral proteins were revealed with anti-mouse
immunoglobulin complexed to horseradish peroxidase and
chemiluminescence reagents (ECL; Amersham) as recommended by the
manufacturer. The enhanced light signal was captured on autoradiographic film (Hyperfilm TM-MP; Amersham). MAbs 125-B and 1H8,
specific for HIV-2 ROD surface glycoprotein gp125 and transmembrane
glycoprotein (TM) gp36, respectively, were provided by F. Traincard
(Hybridolab, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France) (70). To test
the reactivities of mangabey sera by Western blotting, a goat
anti-human immunoglobulin labeled with horseradish peroxidase (Amersham) was used as the secondary antibody, followed by revelation with ECL reagents.
Generation of riboprobes.
The 35S-labeled RNA
probe used for in situ hybridization was derived from the transcription
vector pCR2.1 (Invitrogen), into which a 0.9-kb fragment spanning the
SIVsmFr74 nef gene was inserted. The antisense riboprobe was
generated from the T7 promoter by in vitro transcription of 1 µg of
plasmid template with 50 U of T7 RNA polymerase in the presence of 200 µCi of 35S-UTP. After incubation for 1 h at 40°C,
the DNA template was digested with 10 U of DNase I for 15 min at
37°C. To enhance the penetration of the probe into tissue sections,
35S-labeled RNA was subjected to mild alkaline hydrolysis
in 80 mM NaHCO3-120 mM Na2CO3 at
60°C. The hydrolysis time was optimized to obtain a majority of
fragments in the 150- to 200-nucleotide range. After neutralization
with 600 mM Na acetate and 167 mM acetic acid, the probe was purified
by phenol chloroform extractions and ethanol precipitation. Specific
activity ranged between 1 × 108 and 5 × 108 dpm/µg of input DNA.
In situ hybridization.
Hybridization techniques were based
on published procedures (68). Lymph nodes were frozen in
isopentane cooled in liquid nitrogen. After embedding in OCT compound
(Miles, Elkhart, Ind.), the tissues were cryostat sectioned at 4-µm
intervals, and the sections were stored at
20°C until use.
Hybridization was carried out with freshly cut tissue sections to
minimize RNA degradation during storage. Sections were fixed in 4%
paraformaldehyde and acetylated in 0.25% acetic anhydride-0.1 M
triethanolamine (pH 8) to minimize background. Sections were denatured
in 70% formamide at 70°C for 2 min to enhance the accessibility of
nucleic acids. The hybridization mix contained the
35S-labeled riboprobe at 50,000 dpm/µl, 50% formamide,
10% (wt/vol) dextran sulfate, 0.3 M NaCl, 20 mM Tris (pH 7.5), 5 mM
EDTA, 10 mM NaH2PO4. 1× Denhardt's solution,
0.5-mg/ml yeast tRNA, and 100 mM dithiothreitol (DTT). The mix was
heated at 80°C for 2 min and applied to slides. Coverslips were
mounted, and hybridization was carried out at 45°C overnight in a
humid chamber. Slides were rinsed successively in 2× SSC (1× SSC is
0.15 M NaCl plus 0.015 M sodium citrate)-10 mM DTT for 1 h at
r.t., in 50% formamide-2×-SSC-10 mM DTT for 30 min at 60°C, in
2× SSC for 30 min at r.t., and in 0.1× SSC for 1 h at r.t. and
were then dehydrated in ethanol with 0.3 M ammonium acetate. Slides
were coated with LM-1 emulsion (Amersham) diluted 1:1 with 0.6 M
ammonium acetate and were autoradiographed for 20 days at 4°C. The
long exposure time ensured that weak hybridization signals were
detected. After exposure, the slides were treated with Kodak D-19
developer, fixed, and stained with hematoxylin-eosin. Controls included
hybridization of lymph node tissue from uninfected monkeys and
hybridization with a control probe unrelated to SIV.
Amplification, cloning, and sequencing of SIVsmFr.
Genomic
DNA was extracted from mangabey PBMC and LNC by using a DNA extraction
kit (Qiagen). Proviral gag and env DNA fragments were amplified by nested PCR with two rounds of the following cycling
conditions: 95°C for 2 min followed by 35 cycles of 95°C for
30 s, 55°C for 45 s, and 72°C for 1 min and by a final
extension step of 10 min at 72°C. A gag fragment
corresponding to positions 1076 to 1587 in the SIVsmmH4 sequence
(52) was amplified with the following primers: outer
gag pair (1,265 bp) GF1 (5'-TGG GAG ATG GGC GCG AGA AAC TCC
GTC-3') and GR1 (5'-TCC ACA TTT CCA GCA GCC CTG TCT TCT-3'), and inner
gag pair (512 bp) GF2A-Cla (5'-ccatcgatGGG AAG
AAA GCA GAT GAA TTA GAA-3') and GAG5-Eco (5'-gggaattCTT CTG ATA GCG CCT GAA ATC CTG GCA CTA C-3'). An env
(gp41) fragment corresponding to positions 8329 to 8911 in
the SIVsmmH4 sequence was amplified with the following primers: outer
env pair (680 bp) TM4mg (5'-GTT GTA TAG CCA CGT CAA GAG
GCG-3') and SE24 (5'-GGG ATA GTG CAG CAA CAG CAA CAG C-3') and inner
env pair (583 bp) TM1-Eco (5'-gggaattCAA GAA TTG TTG CGA CTG
ACC G-3') and TM2mg-Xba (5'-gctctaGAA TAT ATT CTA TTT GCC
AAG GC-3'). Primers SE24, GF1, GR1, and GF2A have been described
previously (15, 61). The other primers were designed so that
they matched with regions conserved in all previously published SIVsm
sequences (52). Two of the primers (TM2mg and TM4mg) were
modified after analysis of the first env clones so as to
better match SIVsmFr sequences. The fragments were cloned into a
pBluescript KS vector with the restriction sites included in the
primers and were sequenced with an automated sequencer (Applied
Biosystems Inc.). The clones were designated by the name of the animal
from which they originated, followed by the type of cells from which
they were isolated (ln for LNC, pb for PBMC, and cc for coculture), the
PCR reaction number, and the bacterial clone number (e.g., F74ln62-7).
For each animal, 9 to 11 clones in both gag and
env regions were sequenced.
Competitive PCR.
Experimental conditions were optimized so
that a single round of PCR with only one pair of primer was sufficient
to amplify a SIV-specific band from mangabey DNA. Primers GAG15 (5'-TTA
ATA CTG TCT GCG TCA TTT GGT G-3') and GAG7 (5'-GCC TCC TAC TTG CTG CAC
TGG GTA A-3') were designed to amplify a relatively short gag fragment (191 bp) and to match with the majority of the
sequenced SIVsmFr gag clones. Primer GAG7 sequence was 100%
conserved in 27 of 30 clones, while GAG15 sequence was 100% conserved
in 28 of 30 clones. To enhance specificity, a hot start based on the melting of wax beads (Ampliwax PCR Gem100; Perkin-Elmer) was performed prior to the first PCR cycle. The DNA competitor fragment was engineered by introducing a 36-bp deletion in the 191-bp gag
fragment amplified from clone SIVsmFr85 no. 61-6. The 5' and 3'
fragments that flanked the deletion were amplified separately with
primers GAG15 and GAG12-Pst (5'-CTG CAG CTT TTG CTT CCT CTG TAT G-3') on one side and primers GAG7 and GAG11-Pst (5'-CTG CAG ACA AAA TGC CAG
AAA CAA G-3') on the other side. The resulting amplified products were
restricted with enzyme PstI, purified on ChromaSpinTE100 columns (Clontech, Palo Alto, Calif.), and ligated together. The ligation product was reamplified with primers GAG15 and GAG7 and inserted in a pCR2.1 vector with a TA cloning system (Invitrogen). The
resulting plasmid served as a matrix to produce the competitor fragment
by further PCR with primers GAG15 and GAG7. The amount of competitor
DNA was quantified by optical density measurement and by comparison
with DNA standards after agarose gel electrophoresis. Known amounts of
competitor DNA were diluted in a log-3.16 series in siliconized
microcentrifuge tubes starting from 104 to
100.5 copies/µl. Ten microliters of each dilution was
then coamplified with 250 ng of the DNA to be tested under the PCR
conditions described above. The PCR products resulting from endogenous
and competitor SIV DNA were distinguished by their different sizes on
3% agarose gels. The ratios (R) of endogenous to competitor
PCR products were determined by densitometric measurement of the DNA
bands. R was plotted as a function of the log of competitor
concentration, and the endogenous DNA concentration was deduced by
linear interpolation for R = 1. Determinations of viral
load by competitive PCR were repeated twice for each sample. The
interassay variation was found to be less than 0.5 log.
Competitive RT-PCR.
RNA was extracted from plasma with a
viral RNA extraction kit (Qiagen). The plasma samples were lysed
immediately without prior centrifugation to minimize RNA degradation.
cDNA synthesis was primed with the antisense GAG7 primer. The amount of
RNA corresponding to 21 µl of plasma was incubated with 50 U of
Moloney murine leukemia virus reverse transcriptase (RT; Superscript
RNase H-; Gibco BRL) in a final volume of 20 µl. This mixture was
incubated for 30 min at 42°C, heated for 5 min at 95°C, and chilled
for 5 min at 5°C. Competitive RT-PCR was then performed as described
above, with the same competitor as that for DNA PCR. All experiments included amplification from M78 RNA or DNA as a negative control. The
assay was calibrated by using known amounts of in vitro-transcribed RNA
as the template. The gag clone F74cc55-1 restricted by
EcoRI was used as a matrix for transcription with T3
polymerase, which yielded a 0.59-kb transcript in the sense
orientation. The conditions used for in vitro transcription were
similar to those used to synthesize riboprobes, except that all
ribonucleotides were used at a final concentration of 0.4 mM.
Unincorporated ribonucleotides were removed by spin column
chromatography (Chromaspin-100; Clontech). The resulting RNA was
quantified by optical density measurement and by electrophoresis on a
denaturing 5% polyacrylamide gel in the presence of RNA size markers
(Ambion). Densitometric measurement showed that more than 90% of the
synthesized RNA was of the expected size (0.59 kb). The synthesized RNA
was diluted in a log-3.16 series in diethylpyrocarbonate-treated water
and was used as a template to calibrate the RT-PCR assay.
Phylogenetic analysis.
Amino acid sequences were aligned
with the PILEUP program from the Genetics Computer Group (GCG) package
(version 8.1). A consensus sequence was deduced from the alignment by
using the PRETTY program from the GCG package with a threshold
parameter of 1.5. Nucleotidic sequences were aligned for subsequent
phylogenetic analysis with the CLUSTAL W (version 1.6) program
(30), the final alignment being adjusted by eye. Genetic
distances between pairs of DNA sequences were calculated by Kimura's
two-parameter model. Phylogenetic analysis of sequences consisted of
minimum evolution estimated by the neighbor-joining method of Saitou
and Nei (67) implemented in the CLUSTAL program, without
taking gaps into account. The reproducibility of the branching order was estimated by applying a bootstrap procedure to 1,000 replicates of
the original data set. We verified that tree topologies obtained by the
neighbor-joining method were similar to those obtained by parsimony and
maximum likelihood methods. The phylogenetic relationships among
closely related SIVsmFr clones were tested directly by maximum
likelihood with the fastDNAml program (56) on 100 bootstrap
replicates of the data. Tree topology was further evaluated with the
PUZZLE (version 3.1) program, which estimates maximum likelihoods for a
randomly chosen quartet of sequences and which can be used to rapidly
evaluate whether clusters are significant (69). The ratio of
synonymous to nonsynonymous mutations (ratio of synonymous
substitutions to synonymous sites/ratio of nonsynonymous substitutions
to nonsynonymous sites [Ks/Ka])
was computed according to the method described by Li et al.
(42) by using the NEWDIVERGE program from the GCG package.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The nucleotide
sequences of the 10 SIVsmFr clones aligned in Fig. 3 have been
submitted to GenBank and are available under accession nos. AF041980 to
AF0411989.
 |
RESULTS |
Seroepidemiologic screening.
Nonhuman primates from a French
zoo were screened for evidence of lentivirus infection. The sera of 18 species of primates were tested by Western blotting for reactivity with
HIV-1 and HIV-2 antigens (Table 1). Three
of the four sooty mangabeys (C. atys atys) tested had
antibodies reacting with HIV-2 proteins. The sera cross-reacted
extensively with HIV-2 ROD, since they detected the surface
glycoprotein gp125, the dimeric form of the transmembrane glycoprotein
(TM) gp80, the dimeric and monomeric forms of the envelope precursor
(gp300 and gp140), and, in one case, the major core protein p26 (Fig.
1A). This pattern was indicative of
infection with a virus belonging to the HIV-2-SIVsm-SIVmac group. The
mangabeys had antibodies directed primarily to envelope antigens, since
their serologic reactivities were similar to that obtained with a MAb
directed to HIV-2 surface glycoprotein (Fig. 1B; left panel). In
contrast, the serologic reactivities to Gag antigens were weak, with
only one of three animals positive for antibodies to the p26.

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FIG. 1.
Analysis of mangabey serologic reactivity and of SIVsmFr
protein profile by Western blotting. (A) Reactivity of a typical human
HIV-2-positive serum (left lane) and of three mangabey serum samples
(M66, F74, and F85) with HIV-2 ROD antigens. The sera were tested on
proteins extracts from HIV-2-infected cells (c) and from HIV-2 viral
pellets (v). The human serum reacted with the glycoprotein precursor
(gp 140) and its dimer (gp300), the surface glycoprotein (gp125), the
dimer of transmembrane glycoproteins (gp80), and the Gag core p27. The
mangabey sera reacted mostly with envelope antigens, while their
reactivities to Gag p27 were limited or undetectable. (B) Profile of
SIVsmFr proteins detected with anti-HIV-2 MAb directed to the surface
glycoprotein (125-B) and to the transmembrane glycoprotein (1H8).
Protein extracts from CEMX174 cells infected with either of the three
SIVsmFr isolates, SIVmac251, or HIV-2 ROD were tested with MAb 125-B
(left panel) or with MAb 1H8 (right panel).
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All of the other monkeys and the one chimpanzee included in the survey
tested negative. In particular, no seropositivity was detected among
the white-crowned mangabeys (Cercocebus atys lunulatus), which are phylogenetically close to the sooty mangabey and whose natural range lies next to that of the sooty mangabeys (28).
Isolation of SIVsm from mangabey tissues.
Virus isolation was
performed by cocultivating sooty mangabey PBMC with PHA-activated human
PBMC. Isolation was also performed from cocultures of LNC obtained from
two of the animals (F74 and F85). SIV was readily isolated from the
cells of the three seropositive sooty mangabeys. In a typical
experiment, shown in Fig. 2, the p27 Gag antigen became detectable as early as day 6 of
culture and peaked between days 7 and 11. The depletion of
CD8+ lymphocytes, which was performed with F74 LNC prior to
cultivation, did not accelerate viral growth (Fig. 2). The new viruses
were named SIVsmFr66, SIVsmFr74, and SIVsmFr85, in keeping with the current nomenclature (Fr stands for France).

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FIG. 2.
Isolation of SIVsmFr74 from mangabey PBMC and LNC. Virus
isolation was performed by coculturing F74 PBMC, LNC, and LNC from
which CD8+ cells were depleted (LNC CD8 ) with
human PBMC in the presence of IL-2 and PHA. Virus production was
monitored by an antigen-capture assay specific for SIV p27 Gag.
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To analyze viral proteins, SIVsmFr isolates were amplified on the
CEMx174 cell line. Proteins were extracted at the peak of
infection and analyzed by Western blotting with MAbs directed
to HIV-2
envelope. Reactivity with MAb 125-B showed that the surface
glycoprotein (SU) from the three SIVsmFr isolates had a size
equivalent
to that of HIV-2 ROD gp125 (Fig.
1B [left panel]). In
contrast,
the sizes of the envelope precursor varied, depending on the
isolate.
SIVsmFr74 and SIVsmFr85 had an envelope precursor with a
size
similar to that of HIV-2 ROD gp140, while the envelope precursor
of SIVsmFr66 was smaller. These findings suggested that SIVsmFr74
and SIVsmFr85 were more closely related to each other than they
were to
SIVsmFr66. The size difference could be accounted for
by different
glycosylation patterns or by a premature truncation
of the TM of
SIVsmFr66. Since the genetic analysis did not reveal
the presence of
premature stop codons after the transmembrane
domain of the TM (see
below), differences in the extent of glycosylation
were a more likely
explanation. Blotting with MAb 1H8 specific
for the TM revealed mostly
high-molecular-weight species, which
corresponded to the envelope
precursor gp140, to its dimer gp300,
and to oligomeric forms of the TM
(Fig.
1B [right panel]). The
absence of monomeric forms indicated
that the SIVsmFr TM formed
particularly stable oligomers, a property
which is also characteristic
of HIV-2 (
65).
Characterization of a novel genetic subtype within the SIVsm
group.
To perform genetic analysis, SIVsmFr sequences were
amplified by nested PCR from uncultured mangabey tissues. A 538-bp
fragment of env coding for part of the extracellular and
transmembrane domains of the TM and a 456-bp fragment of
gag spanning the p17/p27 junction were amplified, cloned,
and sequenced. These regions were chosen so that the new sequences
could be aligned over 368 bp with previously published HIV-2 and SIVsm
sequences (15, 25). The genetic analysis was done first with
one clone representative of each of the three PBMC and two LNC samples.
The alignment of deduced protein sequences showed that the three
mangabey viruses shared sequence features characteristic of the
SIVsm-HIV-2 group such as the positions of cysteines and of
glycosylation sites in the TM (Fig.
3B). The premature stop
codon that truncates the TM just 3' to the membrane spanning domain in
some SIV clones (12, 19) was not found in SIVsmFr
(data not shown). A rapid inspection of the alignments showed that
SIVsmFr66, SIVsmFr74, and SIVsmFr85 were genetically close. In
particular, they shared a unique glutamic acid rich motif in
gag (boxed in Fig. 3A). The three SIVsmFr were
nonetheless distinguishable, since sequences obtained from LNC
and PBMC from a given animal were more related than sequences obtained
from two different animals.

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FIG. 3.
Multiple alignement of amino acid sequences comparing
SIVsmFr with other viruses of the HIV-2-SIVsm-SIVmac lineage. Five
representative SIVsmFr clones amplified from lymph nodes DNA (ln) or
from PBMC DNA (pb) were aligned with previously published sequences
(52). (A) Alignment of Gag amino acid sequences. The
junction of the matrix p17 with the core protein p27 is indicated by an
arrow. A glutamic acid rich sequence unique to SIVsmFr viruses is
boxed. (B) Alignment of transmembrane glycoprotein (TM) amino acid
sequences. The limits of the extracellular domain with the hydrophobic
membrane-spanning domain is indicated by an arrow. Stars, cysteine
residues; boxes, conserved glycosylation sites in TM; dashes, sequence
identity with the consensus; dots, gaps introduced to optimize the
alignment.
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Phylogenetic analysis of
gag and
env nucleotide
sequences was done by the neighbor-joining method (
67). The
robustness of
the phylogenetic tree topology was evaluated by analyzing
1,000
bootstrap replicates of the data. The tree constructed from
gag sequences of HIV-2, SIVsm, and SIVmac divided into two
main branches,
with the HIV-2 subtypes A and B on one side, and the
more diverse
HIV-2 subtypes C, D, E, and F intermingled with the SIVsm
subtypes
on the other side. The SIVsmFr sequences formed a new lineage
rattached to the second main branch (Fig.
4A). These findings
confirmed the
extensive genetic diversity of SIVsm isolated to
date. The SIVsmFr
sequences clearly segregated as a distinct lineage,
since their
clustering was supported by a 100% bootstrap value
in both
gag and
env trees (Fig.
4A and B). The same
clustering
was found when trees were constructed by a maximum
likelihood
method that took into account the nonuniform rates of
nucleotide
substitutions characteristic of lentivirus sequences (puzzle
program
with four categories of rate heterogeneity) (
69).
The estimation
of support for the SIVsmFr cluster was 90% by the
quartet puzzling
method on the
gag tree (data not shown).
The closest relatives
of SIVsmFr were found either in the
SIVsmLib-1-SIVsmmPBj group
(15% nucleotide divergence in
gag) or with SIVsmSL92e from Sierra
Leone (13.5% nucleotide
divergence in
env). Since these associations
were not
supported by high bootstrap values, the SIVsmFr viruses
were best
described as forming a new subtype in the diverse HIV-2-SIVsm-SIVmac
group.

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FIG. 4.
Phylogenetic relationships among the newly characterized
SIVsmFr and viruses of the HIV-2-SIVsm-SIVmac lineage. (A)
Phylogenetic tree derived from gag sequences. The analysis
was performed on a 369-bp fragment that encompassed the Gag p17-p26
junction. (B) Phylogenetic tree derived from env sequences.
A 380-bp fragment coding for a portion of the extracellular and
membrane-spanning domains of TM was analyzed. Phylogenetic trees were
constructed by the neighbor-joining method on 1,000 bootstrap
replicates of the data. Values on the nodes are percentages of
bootstraps with which the cluster is supported; only values greater
than 70% are shown. The new SIVsmFr sequences are boxed; HIV-2
subtypes A to F, as defined in references 14 and
25, are indicated.
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The two known clusters of human and simian viruses, namely, HIV-2
FO784-SIVsmLib-1 from Liberia and HIV-2PA-SIVsmSL92b and
-c from
Sierra Leone, were apparent on the phylogenetic trees.
The genetic and
geographic proximity of these pairs of viruses
has provided the basis
for the idea that HIV-2 subtypes emerged
as a consequence of multiple
independent transmission of SIVsm
to humans (
14,
15,
25,
26). We identified a possible new
HIV-2-SIVsm pair in the
env tree, since SIVsmCI2 from Ivory Coast
(
61)
clustered in 74% of the bootstraps with the HIV-2 2238
sequence from
Liberia. Although SIVsmCI2
gag sequence was not
available to
confirm its relatedness to the HIV-2 type C subtype,
this observation
supports the idea that multiple interspecies
transmission events are
needed to explain the phylogenetic relationships
within the
HIV-2-SIVsm-SIVmac group.
Intraindividual genetic variability of SIVsmFr.
We evaluated
the intraindividual genetic variability of SIVsmFr by sequencing a
total of 60 clones obtained from both mangabey tissues and
short-term-cultured isolates. The maximum nucleotide divergence between
pairs of SIVsmFr clones was 9% in gag and 6% in
env (Table 2). The genetic
proximity between the SIVsmFr viruses suggested that viral transmission
had occurred among the three seropositive mangabeys. Since these
animals were of unrelated geographical origins, their harboring the
same SIVsm subtype by chance would have been highly unlikely.
The phylogenetic relationships among SIVsmFr clones were analyzed by
the fastDNAml program on 100 bootstrap replicates of
the data. The
maximum likelihood method implemented in fastDNAml
was preferred over a
distance method because the data set consisted
of closely related
sequences. Phylogenetic reconstructions showed
that the sequences
derived from a given animal clustered together
in both
gag
and
env trees (Fig.
5A and
B). Thus, the viral
quasispecies
found in each animal were distinguishable, despite the
fact that
the range of intraindividual nucleotide divergence overlapped
with that of interindividual divergence (Table
2). In addition,
the
clustering of clones from the same animal suggested that
cross-contamination
of samples during PCR amplification did not occur.

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FIG. 5.
Phylogenetic relationships among SIVsmFr clones. (A)
Phylogenetic tree derived from sequence comparison of gag
clones. (B) Phylogenetic tree derived from sequence comparison of
env (TM) clones. The trees were constructed by the maximum
likelihood method implemented in the FastDNAml program, with 100 bootstrap replicates of the data. Values on the nodes are percentages
of bootstraps with which the cluster is supported; only values greater
than 70% are shown. SIVsmFr66 clones are underlined, SIVsmFr74 clones
are in boldface type, and SIVsmFr85 clones are shaded. Abbreviations
within the names of the clones indicate whether they were amplified
from PBMC (pb), lymph nodes (ln), or short-term cocultures with human
PBMC (cc).
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Within each viral quasispecies, sequences derived from LNC and PBMC did
not cluster separately (see, for example, the cosegregation
of clones
F74ln62-7 and F74pb80-2 or that of F85ln63-3 and of
F85pb81-1 in the
env tree). This observation indicated that
compartmentalization
of the virus between the blood and the lymphoid
organs was not
stringent.
The clones derived from short-term cultures of SIVsmFr66 and SIVsmFr85
formed a homogeneous population, but those obtained
from SIVsmFr74
culture were genetically diverse, with as much
as 4.25% nucleotide
divergence in
env. Similarly, SIVsmFr74 clones
from LNC and
PBMC exhibited more genetic diversity than those
from the other two
viruses, with a maximum of 6.5% nucleotide
divergence in
gag (Table
2). In both
gag and
env
trees, SIVsmFr74
sequences formed two main branches, while SIVsmFr66
and SIVsmFr85
clones clustered in a unique branch. The more diverse
viral quasispecies
in F74 suggested a more ancient infection in this
animal.
The group of F85 clones branched closer to that of F74 clones than to
that of M66 clones. In the
env tree, the association
between
F74 and F85 clones was supported by 78% of bootstrap replicates.
These
data, in addition to the similarity between F74 and F85
envelope
precursors, suggested that viral transmission had occurred
between F74
and F85 rather than between M66 and F85. Considering
the more diverse
viral quasispecies in F74, it was likely that
SIV was transmitted to
the young female F85 from the older female
F74. This scenario is
consistent with the history of the animals,
since F85 had to be
separated from the F74-M66 group after she
had been severely bitten by
other females.
Estimation of the fixation rate of mutations.
F85 had been in
contact with the two older mangabeys for a limited time period between
November 1985 and October 1986. Tissue samples from F85 were collected
in June 1996. We could deduce from this chronology that SIVsmFr
transmission between F74 or M66 and F85 had taken place about 10 years
ago (minimum duration of infection, 9.6 years; maximum duration of
infection, 10.5 years). Given this duration for viral evolution, it is
possible to estimate the fixation rate of mutations from the divergence
observed between viral sequences of the donor and recipient animals.
Considering that SIVsmFr was transmitted from F74 to F85, one can
identify among SIVsmFr74 sequences the clone that is the closest to the one that was actually transmitted (F74ln60-2). The rate of mutation fixation between this ancestorlike sequence and the most divergent clone in the recipient (F85ln61-5) is then calculated. Thus, if the
6.2% divergence that separates clone F74ln60-2 from clone F85ln61-5 accumulated over 9.6 years, the estimated fixation rate of
mutation would be 6.52 × 10
3 substitutions per site
per year (subst/site/yr). The same type of calculation performed with
env sequences yields an estimate of 3.58 × 10
3 subst/site/yr (Table 2). Making the hypothesis of
viral transmission from M66 to F85 leads to very similar estimates for
both gag and env (Table 2). Assuming that the
fixation rate in gag (6.52 × 10
3
subst/site/yr) is equivalent to the mutation rate, and considering that
the point mutation rate for SIVsm RT is equivalent to that determined
for HIV-1 (3.4 × 10
5 subst/base/cycle)
(45), the minimum number of consecutive viral replication
cycles needed to account for the observed sequence divergence is 190 per year. These calculations indicate that SIVsmFr replicates at a high
rate in mangabeys, despite the nonpathogenic character of infection in
this host. It should be noted that this rate of virus replication
represents a minimal estimate, since the actual mutation rate is higher
than the observed fixation rate, especially in relatively conserved
regions of the genome such as gag.
Ks/Ka ratio.
Evaluation of
the Ks/Ka ratio gives an indication
of the type of selection pressure that contributes to the evolution of
viral sequences. A majority of synonymous mutations
(Ks/Ka of greater than 1) indicates
the predominance of a purifying type of selection, which is
associated with a preferential elimination of viruses with variant
amino acids. Conversely, a majority of nonsynonymous mutations
(Ks/Ka of less than 1) reflects the
predominance of a diversifying type of selection, such as the pressure
from the immune system which selects for viral escape variants.
The
Ks/Ka ratio between pairs of
sequences obtained from the same animal was computed according to the
method of Li et al.
(
42). Analysis of SIVsmFr pairs of
sequences revealed a high
Ks/Ka
ratio, with means of 5.47 in
gag (standard deviation = 5.08)
and of 2.32 in
env. (standard deviation = 1.85).
Such
Ks/Ka ratios
were indicative of
a predominant purifying selection for viral
fitness, which is usually
the case in these regions of the lentivirus
genome (
5,
39).
It was interesting to note marked differences
between the
Ka values in the three infected animals, while
the
Ks values were similar (Fig.
6).
Ka values were
particularly low
between pairs of SIVsmFr85 sequences, indicating a
strong conservation
of amino acid sequences for this virus. Since the
Ka value was
shown to increase over time in the
course of HIV infection (
44,
75), a similar phenomenon may
apply to SIV infection, and the
low
Ka obtained
for SIVsmFr85 may reflect the fact that SIV infection
is more recent
for F85 than for F74 or M66. Thus, analysis of
Ka and
Ks parameters
supports the hypothesis that SIVsmFr was
transmitted to F85 by one of
the two older animals, rather than
the reverse.

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FIG. 6.
Comparison of synonymous and nonsynonymous mutations
between pairs of sequences. Ks and
Ka values between pairs of clones obtained from
the same animal were measured. The range of the
Ka parameter was limited for F85, indicating
homogeneity of viral amino acid sequences in this animal.
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Viral load in SIVsmFr-infected mangabeys.
A competitive
PCR assay specific for SIVsm sequences was developed to
evaluate the viral load in infected mangabey tissues. The
assay is based on the coamplification of a known amount of competitor
DNA molecules with the endogenous DNA molecules to be quantified. The
competitor fragment was engineered by introducing a 36-bp deletion in a
SIVsmFr74 gag clone, by PCR-driven mutagenesis (see
Materials and Methods). To optimize the efficiency of amplification, the primers were chosen in conserved regions of the previously sequenced gag clones, and the size of the amplified fragment
was limited to 191 bp. The competitive PCR assay was calibrated by using known amounts of a plasmid carrying the undeleted gag
fragment as samples. The assay gave a linear response over the range of concentrations studied [log (estimated copies) = 1.10 × log
(expected copies) + 0.53] (Fig. 7A). The
concentration of competitor copies was adjusted in further experiments
so that the estimated and expected copy numbers were equal.

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FIG. 7.
Quantitation of SIVsmFr by competitive PCR. (A)
Calibration of the competitive PCR assay. Test samples containing known
amounts of a SIVsmFr74 gag plasmid were assayed by
competitive PCR. The log of the DNA copy number estimated in the assay
was plotted as a function of the log of input plasmid copy number. Each
plot symbol corresponds to the result of a series of amplifications in
the presence of different dilutions of competitor DNA fragment. The
competitive PCR assay gave a linear response over the range of
concentrations studied (y = 1.10 x + 0.53; r = 0.995). (B) Example of a competitive PCR.
Lymph node DNA from animal F85 was amplified in the presence of serial
dilutions of competitor DNA. The PCR products were separated by
electrophoresis on a 3% agarose gel. The endogenous SIV product can be
distinguished from the competitor product by its size, which is larger
by 36 bp. m.w.m., molecular weight marker.
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As shown in Fig.
7B, a single PCR assay with only one set
of primers was sufficient to amplify a band visible in a
BET-stained
agarose gel from SIVsmFr-infected PBMC and LNC DNA. This
indicated
that the viral load in SIVsmFr-infected animals was
relatively
high. The quantitation showed that as many as 24,000 viral
DNA
copies per 10
6 LNC were detected (Table
3). DNA samples obtained from the
seronegative
mangabey, M78, remained persistently negative. A serial
dilution
PCR experiment, which was done by diluting in parallel
SIVsmFr85
lymph node DNA and a SIVsmFr
gag plasmid in
negative mangabey
DNA, gave results consistent with those of the
competitive PCR
assay, with a viral load close to 10
4 viral
copies/10
6 cells. In infected animals, LNC harbored
proportionally more
viral DNA copies than PBMC, which was consistent
with the lymphoid
organs being the main site of SIV replication. The
ratios of LNC
viral DNA to PBMC viral DNA, which ranged from 2 to 4, were comparable
to or lower than those measured for HIV-infected
patients, depending
on the study considered (
49,
58,
59).
The assay was adapted to amplify viral RNA in plasma by introducing a
step for cDNA synthesis prior to the amplification.
RT-PCR was
calibrated by using known amounts of in vitro-transcribed
RNA as
samples. The
gag plasmid F74cc55-1 was used as a matrix
for
in vitro transcription. The resulting RNA was quantified by
optical
density measurement and denaturing PAGE before being tested
by RT-PCR
(Fig.
8). The estimated RNA copy number
was found to
be less than the expected copy number [log (estimated
copies)
= 0.91 × log (expected copies) + 0.03], which indicated
that the
efficiency of cDNA synthesis was less than 100% (approximate
efficiency,
20%). RT-PCR results were corrected in further experiments
to
account for the cDNA synthesis efficiency. The analysis of mangabey
samples showed that the concentrations of viral RNA in plasma
ranged
from 4 × 10
5 to 1 × 10
7 copies per
ml (Table
3). Taken together, these data showed that
the
cell-associated and plasma viral loads detected in SIVsm-infected
mangabeys were as high as those seen in susceptible hosts (humans
or
macaques) during the asymptomatic stage of HIV or SIVmac infection
(
32,
48,
72).

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FIG. 8.
Calibration of the competitive RT-PCR assay. Known
amounts of RNA transcribed from a gag plasmid clone
(F74cc55-1) were assayed by competitive RT-PCR. The log of the SIV RNA
copy number estimated in the assay was plotted as a function of the log
of the input RNA copy number. The competitive RT-PCR assay gave a
linear response over the range of concentrations studied
(y = 0.91 x + 0.03; r = 0.987).
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In situ hybridization in lymph nodes.
Histologic examination
and in situ hybridization were performed with lymph nodes obtained from
F74, F85, and M78. The histology of the lymph nodes from infected
mangabeys was normal, with no signs of follicular hyperplasia or of
lymphoid depletion. Germinal centers of limited size and normal shape
were found scattered at the periphery of the tissue sections (Fig.
9A). Flow cytometry analysis performed
with F85 LNC confirmed that there were no obvious signs of CD4
lymphocyte depletion or of abnormal cellular activation in this animal
compared to the uninfected control M78. The CD4/CD8 lymphocyte ratios
were 1.2 for F85 and 1.5 for M78. In PBMC, the CD4/CD8 ratios were 0.5 and 0.7, respectively. The fraction of lymphocytes expressing the
activation marker CD25 was similar in both animals (7% in lymph nodes
and less than 2% in PBMC).

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FIG. 9.
Detection of SIV expression in lymph nodes by in situ
hybridization. Frozen lymph node sections were hybridized with a
35S-labeled riboprobe specific for SIVsmFr RNA. (A)
Low-magnification view of F85 lymph node. The histology is normal, with
follicles of a limited size. No hybridization signal could be detected
in the germinal centers (g) (original magnification, ×100); (B)
higher-magnification view of F85 lymph node showing numerous infected
cells scattered in the paracortical region. The intensity of the
hybridization signal indicates that the cells are productively infected
(original magnification; ×250).
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To perform in situ hybridization, the tissue sections were
incubated with a
35S-labeled riboprobe derived from a
SIVsmFr74
env clone. The riboprobe
was synthesized in
the antisense orientation so as to detect viral
RNA. Numerous infected
cells were detected in F85 lymphoid tissue
(Fig.
9B), while there were
fewer positive cells in the case of
F74. Tissue sections from the
uninfected mangabey M78 remained
negative. The intensity of the
hybridization signal in F85 and
F74 tissues indicated that productive
virus replication took place
in the infected cells, which localized
mainly in the T-cell areas
of the lymph node. We did not detect the
diffuse hybridization
signal that is usually seen in the germinal
centers of hyperplasic
HIV- or SIV-infected lymph nodes and which
reflects the presence
of viral particles trapped at the surface of
follicular dendritic
cells (Fig.
9A). The viral load was quantitated by
counting the
number of hybridization spots per surface unit of lymph
node section
(Fig.
10). A comparison
was made with lymph nodes from SIVmac-infected
rhesus macaques that
were previously studied (
11). Macaque lymph
nodes were
evaluated 2 months after virus inoculation, i.e., early
in the
asymptomatic stage of the infection. The levels of infection
in
mangabey lymphoid tissues were in the same range as those found
during the asymptomatic stage of SIVmac infection in macaques
that
were slow or intermediate progressors (1 to 10 positive cells/2
mm
2) but were lower than those observed in the lymph nodes
of the
fastest progressors (as many as 200 positive cells/2
mm
2). Thus, the degree of virus replication did not
discriminate
between the nonpathogenic infection of mangabeys and the
slowly
progressive infection of macaques.

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FIG. 10.
Comparison of the numbers of productively infected
cells in mangabey and macaque lymph nodes. The numbers of productively
infected cells detected by in situ hybridization in a 2-mm2
area of lymph node section were counted. The mean counts obtained for
three sections are indicated. Macaque lymph nodes were analyzed 2 months after inoculation of SIVmac251. Mangabey lymph nodes were
obtained from naturally infected animals.
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 |
DISCUSSION |
Several lines of evidence converge to show that SIVsm replicates
actively and to high levels in its natural host: (i) SIVsmFr was
rapidly isolated from the PBMC and the LNC of seropositive mangabeys;
(ii) the genetic diversity and the estimated rate of mutation fixation
were high, which indicated that numerous virus replicative cycles took
place in infected animals; (iii) the viral load measured in sooty
mangabeys was equivalent to those seen during the asymptomatic stage of
pathogenic lentivirus infections in primates; (iv) productively
infected cells were detected in lymphoid tissues. Despite its
chronically active nature, SIVsm infection does not cause any apparent
pathology in sooty mangabeys (22, 23, 47). Indeed, the
seropositive animals included in this study had been infected for at
least 9 years, the duration of infection being probably greater for the
F74 animal. None of the mangabeys exhibited clinical signs, except for
an arthritic condition associated with old age in M66. The absence of
SIVsm pathogenicity for mangabeys poses a paradox, since there is a clear positive correlation between viral load and pathogenic
potenial in other lentivirus infections of primates. Longitudinal
virologic studies with HIV-infected patients demonstrated a
strong association between viral load in plasma in the asymptomatic
stage and the risk of progression to AIDS (48). Levels of
105 to 107 viral RNA copies/ml are associated
with a high risk of progression to AIDS in HIV-positive individuals. It
is intriguing that similar plasma viral loads are well-tolerated in
SIV-infected mangabeys. The same observation holds for the cellular
viral load, since levels of 103 to 104 viral
DNA copies/106 cells are found in HIV-infected patients
(16) as well as in SIV-infected mangabeys (this study
and reference 15).
The comparison of SIVsm and SIVmac infections is instructive, since
both viruses are of the same phylogenetic origin, and since SIVmac is
the result of cross-species transmission of SIVsm to macaques (27,
51). Viral loads similar to those measured in the present study
have been described for SIVmac-infected macaques that ultimately
progressed to AIDS. Macaques with 105 to 107
viral RNA copies/ml plasma are not among the fastest progressors, which
harbor as many as 109 copies/ml, but they do develop
disease (32, 72). SIVmac genetic variability has been
extensively studied in the hypervariable regions of the envelope. The
rate of mutation fixation estimated for V1 and V2 is in the order of
10
2 to 10
3 subst/site/yr (9, 10, 36,
41, 57, 62). It is at least 1 order of magnitude lower in more
conserved regions of the genome such as the integrase
(10
3 to 10
4 subst/site/yr) (36).
Since we analyzed genetic variability in relatively conserved regions
of the SIVsm genome (p17 Gag and TM), the rates of 4 × 10
3 to 6 × 10
3 subst/site/yr
estimated for these regions are comparable to those found for SIVmac.
Thus, SIV replicates at a high rate in mangabeys as well as in
macaques, although it induces disease only in the latter species. The
idea that SIVsm replicates continuously in its natural host is further
supported by the high genetic variability observed in the HIV-2-SIVsm
group as a whole. The novel SIVsm subtype identified in this study
forms an additional lineage in the already diverse HIV-2-SIVsm
phylogenetic tree (14, 15, 25, 26, 61). The facts that SIVsm
branches are interspersed with and are as long as HIV-2 branches imply
that SIVsm evolves as rapidly as HIV-2.
Comparison of SIVsm and SIVagm models of nonpathogenic lentivirus
infections reveals significant differences. The main characteristic of
SIVagm infection in African green monkeys is a low viral load, with 20 to 500 provirus per 106 PBMC detected (8, 29).
The viral load is thus 1 to 2 orders of magnitude lower in African
green monkeys than in mangabeys. In addition, the ratio of LNC viral
DNA to PBMC viral DNA is close to 1 in SIVagm infection, suggesting
that lymphoid organs do not represent a hidden viral reservoir
(8). This ratio ranges from 2 to 4 in SIVsmFr-infected
mangabeys, which is closer to that seen in HIV infection and which
indicates a preferential infection of lymphoid organs (49, 58,
59). The only reported case of high viral load in SIVagm
infection was after experimental inoculation of the SIVagm90 strain in
pig-tailed macaques (31). Since the infected macaques
developed an AIDS-like syndrome while African green monkeys inoculated
with the same strain remained healthy, the data were compatible with a
strong association between viral load and pathogenicity. Studies of
SIVagm genetic variability revealed that the rate of mutation fixation
was high, ranging from 10
2 to 10
3
subst/site/yr in env (4, 19, 50). The conjunction
of a low viral load and of a highly variable virus in African green monkeys led to the hypothesis that SIVagm replication was equivalent to
that seen in pathogenic lentivirus infections but that the containment
of viral replication was more efficient (50). However, the
data obtained in the SIVsm-mangabey model indicate that the containment
hypothesis is not applicable to every natural SIV infection and that a
high viral load is not necessarily associated with disease progression.
The reasons that SIVsm-infected mangabeys do not develop disease remain
to be elucidated. It is possible that SIVsm replicates in mangabey
cells without inducing major cytopathic effects, although this property
has yet to be clearly demonstrated in vitro. In some studies, SIVsm was
reported to be less cytopathic for mangabey cells than for macaque
cells, while in others the difference was not apparent (21,
74). Another possibility is that the host response to SIV has
benign or deleterious effects, depending on the species. The
observation that PBMC of SIVsm-infected macaques show an increased
susceptibility to apoptosis upon anti-CD3 stimulation, which is not
seen with PBMC of SIVsm-infected mangabeys, suggests that immune
activation, reflected by apoptosis, is more pronounced in monkeys
susceptible to disease (71). This idea is supported by the
histology of lymph nodes, which is normal for mangabeys (Fig. 8) and
hyperplasic for macaques in the asymptomatic stage of infection
(6, 13, 64, 66). A chronic lymphocyte activation, sustained
by an abnormal stimulation of the immune response and possibly by a
direct action of the viral protein Nef (2, 7, 18), may
ultimately impair the renewal capacity of the immune system in
susceptible species.
The extent of SIVsmFr genetic variability implies not only that the
virus replicates continuously in mangabeys, but also that clearance of virions and of infected cells is relatively efficient. As
reasoned for SIVmac infection (62), a clearance
mechanism is needed to explain why the rapid rate of SIVsmFr
replication does not lead to the exponential accumulation of virions to
astronomical numbers. The most likely explanation is that virions
and productively infected cells are continuously destroyed by
immunological mechanisms. The detection of anti-SIV antibodies
and of proliferative responses in SIVsm-infected mangabeys (1,
24) indicates that both the humoral and the cellular arms of the
immune response are activated and that natural SIVsm infection does not
induce tolerance in the strict sense of the word. Interestingly,
however, the intensity of the response seems somewhat lower in
mangabeys than that in macaques, as indicated by a generally low
anti-SIV antibody titer in the former species (1, 24). The
reactivity to Gag antigens is particularly weak, since of the three
SIVsmFr-seropositive animals, only one had a serum that detected a p27
Gag band by Western blotting (Fig. 2A). Limited antibody titers may
explain why viral particle-antibody complexes are not detected in the germinal centers of lymph nodes in the course of natural SIV infection in mangabeys as well as in African green monkeys (this study and reference 8). Regarding the cellular response,
CD8+ lymphocytes from macaques as well as mangabeys and
African green monkeys have been found to inhibit SIV replication in
vitro through the action of soluble factors (53, 63, 73).
However, in our hands, the depletion of CD8+ lymphocytes
did not facilitate the recovery of SIVsmFr from mangabey cells (Fig.
2), which suggests that the CD8+ cell-mediated antiviral
effect is limited in some cases of SIVsm infection and that it depends
on the experimental system. It has long been recognized that SIV is
more easily isolated from mangabeys than from macaques in the
asymptomatic stage of infection (24, 63), which furthers the
idea of a relatively weak CD8+ cell-mediated response in
mangabeys. Thus, SIVsm infection seems characterized by a delicate
balance between a high viral replication and a moderate immune
response, without deleterious effects on the renewal capacity of the
immune system or escalation of the viral load.
In conclusion, this study provides evidence that SIVsm replicates
actively and establishes a high viral load in its natural host. Since
infected mangabeys do not progress to disease, these data indicate that
the viral load is not the sole determinant of SIV pathogenic potential.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Alain Blanchard for critical reading of the manuscript
and Gérard Masson for help with the analysis of synonymous and
nonsynonymous mutations.
This work was supported by grants from the Pasteur Institute and the
ANRS (Agence Nationale de la Recherche sur le SIDA).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Present address: Aaron Diamond
AIDS Research Center, 455 First Ave., 7th Floor, New York, NY 10016. Phone: (212) 448-5043. Fax: (212) 725-1126. E-mail:
chakra{at}adarc.org.
Present address: Regional Primate Research Center, I-521 Health
Sciences Center, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195.
 |
REFERENCES |
| 1.
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J Virol, May 1998, p. 3872-3886, Vol. 72, No. 5
0022-538X/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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