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Journal of Virology, January 1999, p. 92-100, Vol. 73, No. 1
Division of Basic Sciences, Department of
Pediatrics, National Jewish Medical and Research Center, Denver,
Colorado 80206,1 and
Departments of
Immunology, Pediatrics, and Biochemistry & Molecular Genetics,
University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colorado
802622
Received 2 July 1998/Accepted 25 September 1998
The importance of the Fas death pathway in human immunodeficiency
virus (HIV) infection has been the subject of many studies. Missing
from these studies is direct measurement of infected cell susceptibility to Fas-induced death. To address this question, we
investigated whether T cells infected with HIV are more susceptible to
Fas-induced death. We found that Fas cross-linking caused a decrease in
the number of HIV-infected Jurkat T cells and CD4+
peripheral blood leukocytes (PBLs). We confirmed this finding by
demonstrating that there were more apoptotic infected than uninfected
cells after Fas ligation. The increase in sensitivity of
HIV-infected cells to Fas killing mapped to vpu, while
nef, vif, vpr, and second exon of
tat did not appear to contribute. Furthermore, expression
of Vpu in Jurkat T cells rendered them more susceptible to Fas-induced
death. These results show that HIV-infected cells are more sensitive to
Fas-induced death and that the Vpu protein of HIV contributes to this
sensitivity. The increased sensitivity of HIV-infected cells to
Fas-induced death might help explain why these cells have such a short
in vivo half-life.
The in vivo half-life of
CD4+ T cells infected with human immunodeficiency virus
(HIV) is between 1 and 2 days (55). Why do infected cells
have such a short in vivo half-life? Does the virus directly cause the
death of infected cells, or is the immune system very efficient at
clearing infected cells from the body? One mechanism used by the immune
system to eliminate unwanted T cells is the Fas/Fas ligand (FasL)
pathway (47). Fas is expressed on T cells, and its ligation
by FasL can lead to apoptosis of the cell. The FasL used to cause this
death can be expressed either on the same cell or on a neighboring cell
(10, 14, 29). The cellular cascade of events from Fas
ligation to apoptosis has been extensively studied (11). The
cross-linking of Fas leads to the recruitment of FADD (FLICE-associated
death domain) to the receptor complex. FADD recruits the zymogen FLICE
(caspase 8) to the Fas receptor complex through interactions with its
death effector domain. FLICE then cleaves itself (46) to
form an active caspase which in turn activates other caspases. The
nuclease, caspase-activated DNase, is activated by caspase 3 (57), and the cellular DNA is cleaved, killing the cell.
Controversy surrounds the issue of whether the Fas death pathway is a
significant mechanism of infected cell death. Many studies have tried
to determine the mechanism by which HIV kills cells in vitro. One
report showed a small contribution of Fas/FasL to the death of infected
cells in vitro (37). However, most in vitro systems have
demonstrated that HIV causes death of cultured T cells in a
Fas-independent manner (19, 21, 50). Apoptosis of peripheral
blood lymphocytes (PBLs) from HIV-infected people can be detected
immediately ex vivo (13) and following in vitro culture
(17, 23, 24). The apoptosis seen upon in vitro culture cannot be blocked by blocking the Fas/FasL pathway (19, 50) or completely blocked by using caspase inhibitors (31). This may indicate that either the cells are primed to undergo apoptosis in
vivo and are already past the point where blocking the Fas pathway or
caspase inhibitors can work, or they are dying in a caspase-independent
manner. Although culturing PBLs from HIV-positive people may help
elucidate why, in general, CD4+ cells die, <1% of those
cells are productively infected (12) and these studies do
not elucidate the mechanism by which the infected cells die in vivo.
The question remains, why do infected cells die in vivo? Others have
addressed this question by attempting to inhibit HIV-induced death in
vitro with agents that block Fas/FasL signaling. We have chosen to test
directly whether HIV-infected cells exposed to Fas cross-linking are
more susceptible than uninfected cells to death. Addressing the
question in this manner in vitro may give insight into whether infected
cells are susceptible to this pathway of death in vivo, where there are
many more cell types that might express FasL than in cell culture systems.
One possible source of FasL in infected individuals is cytotoxic T
cells (CTLs) (4, 30, 42). The contribution of
HIV-specific CTL response to decreasing viral load is disputed
(25-27, 39, 56, 72). A recent study that used more
sensitive techniques to measure antigen-specific CTLs (3)
found that the number of CD8+ HIV-specific CTLs is
inversely correlated to the number of infected cells (51).
Thus, HIV-specific CTLs might play an important role in killing
infected cells. Furthermore, there have been reports that macrophages
express FasL (9, 32) and that infection of macrophages by
HIV increases FasL expression (9). Also, macrophages from
HIV-infected people are more able to kill CD4+ cells than
macrophages from uninfected individuals. This death can be
partially blocked by blocking the Fas death pathway (52). HIV-specific CTLs and macrophages which are low to absent in in vitro
cultures of infected cells might be a source of FasL in vivo.
Here, we confirmed the results of Kobayshi et al. (35) in
finding that infected T-cell lines are more susceptible to Fas-induced death and further show that HIV-infected primary CD4+
lymphocytes are also more susceptible to Fas-induced death. We also
demonstrate that at least part of HIV's increased susceptibility to
Fas-induced death maps to Vpu and that Vpu can function alone in its
ability to augment Fas-induced death when tested in Jurkat cells.
Cell culture.
293 cells and CD4+
Preparation of viral stocks.
Viral constructs p83-2 (5' half
of NL4-3), p83-10 (3' half of NL4-3), p1971-1 (5' Fas killing assays.
Jurkat cells were infected in duplicate
with viral supernatants collected from CEM T cells in the presence of
DEAE-dextran (20 µg/ml), using a range of multiplicities of infection
(0.012 to 0.075). Two days after infection, the cells were plated at 5 × 105 to 10 × 105/ml in medium
containing anti-Fas antibody CH-11 (0, 6, 25, or 100 ng/ml; Oncor,
Gaithersburg, Md., or Upstate Biotechnology, Inc., Lake Placid, N.Y.)
or anti-Fas antibody M33 (100 ng/ml; Immunex, Seattle, Wash.)
(1); 22 to 24 h later, the cells were harvested, fixed
in 1% paraformaldehyde, washed twice in phosphate-buffered saline
(PBS), and permeabilized with 0.1% saponin in the presence of 10% FCS
in PBS. Then 2.5 µg of anti-Gag antibody K57-RD1 or K57-fluorescein
isothiocyanate (FITC) (Coulter, Hialeah, Fla.) was added, and the cells
were incubated at room temperature for 30 min. The cells were washed
twice in staining buffer (balanced salt solution, 2% FCS, 0.1% sodium
azide) and kept at 4°C until fluorescence-activated cell sorting
analysis. Cells were analyzed with either a FACSCalibur or FACScan flow
cytometer (Becton Dickinson, San Jose, Calif.). CD4+ PBLs
were infected 3 days after phytohemagglutinin activation at a
multiplicity of infection of 0.06 to 0.2. Cells were plated in medium
in the presence of recombinant human interleukin-2 (20 IU/ml; R&D
Systems, Minneapolis, Minn.) at a concentration of 1.5 × 106 to 2 × 106 cells/ml. Three to four
days after infection, the cells were counted and plated at a
concentration of 106 cells/ml with or without anti-Fas
antibody CH-11 or M33 (400 ng/ml) in medium supplemented with
recombinant human interleukin-2 (5 IU/ml); 48 h later, the cells
were harvested and analyzed for Gag expression as described above. Vpu
Jurkat cell clones, control Jurkat cell clones, and parental Jurkat
cells were plated at 0.5 × 106 to 1 × 106 cells/ml in medium that contained either CH-11 or M33
anti-Fas antibody (25 ng/ml) for 22 to 24 h. The cells were
harvested and stained for annexin V binding as described below.
Annexin V binding.
NL4-3, NL4-3 Jurkat cell clones.
pCLIRES-GFP was made by inserting an
internal ribosome entry site (IRES)-green fluorescent protein (GFP)
cassette, kindly provided by Brian Schaefer, into the BamHI
site in the vector pCLXSN, described previously (49).
pCLVPU-GFP was derived from pCLRIES-GPF by the addition of the coding
sequence of Vpu into the EcoRI site in front of the IRES-GFP
cassette. The coding sequence of Vpu was obtained from NL4-3 by
performing PCR on p83-10, a vector containing the 3' half of NL4-3 (see
above). The addition of an unaltered Vpu to the vector was confirmed by
sequence analysis. The vectors pCLIRES-GPF and pCLVPU-GFP were
transfected either into the Phoenix amphotropic packaging cell line
(kind gift of Gary P. Nolan) or into 293 cells in the presence of
pCLAmpho (49) by the Lipofectamine (Gibco BRL, Grand Island,
N.Y.) or 2-bromoethanesulfonic acid (58) transfection
method, respectively. Virus was collected 24 to 48 h after
transfection and used to infect Jurkat T-cell clones in the presence of
DEAE-dextran (20 µg/ml). Two days later, the cells were analyzed on a
FACScan or FACSCalibur flow cytometer for the number of GFP-positive
cells; 0.3 to 0.5 GFP-positive Jurkat cells were cultured per well in a
96-well plate in media containing G418 (1 mg/ml). Neomycin-resistant
colonies were grown and checked for the presence of GFP by flow
cytometric analysis. GFP-positive clones from pCLVPU-GFP were further
screened by Western blotting for the presence of Vpu.
Western Blotting.
Cell lysates were collected by lysing
3 × 106 cells in 50 µl of TENC {50 mM Tris-HCl
(pH 7.4), 5 mM EDTA, 150 mM NaCl, 0.5% 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)-dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate
(CHAPS)}, followed by the addition of 5 µl TENC-2% sodium
deoxycholate. The cells were incubated on ice for 15 min and then
subjected to a 5-min centrifugation at 700 × g. The
amount of cell protein was determined by using the DC protein assay
(Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, Calif.). Equal amounts of cell lysate
were run on a sodium dodecyl sulfate-15% polyacrylamide gel and
transferred to nitrocellulose in 10 mM CAPS-10% methanol at 1 mA for
1 h at 4°C. The blots were blocked with 5% dry milk in PBS
overnight at 4°C. The blots were then probed with either rabbit
anti-Vpu anti-serum (1:100 dilution; AIDS Research and Reference
Reagent Program) (43) or mouse anti-Gag antibody K57-FITC
(0.5 µg/ml Coulter) in PBS-5% dry milk for 1 to 2 h at room
temperature. The blot was washed five times in PBS-T (PBS, 0.2% Tween
20), incubated with a 1:2,000 dilution of horseradish peroxidase-linked protein A (Amersham, Arlington Heights, Ill.) in PBS-5% dry milk for
1 h at room temperature, washed five times in PBS-T, exposed to
Super Signal chemiluminescent substrate (Pierce, Rockford, Ill.) for 1 min, exposed to film, and developed. Blots were stripped (100 mM
2-mercaptoethanol, 2% sodium dodecyl sulfate, 62.5 mM Tris-HCl [pH
6.7]) for 30 min at 50°C, washed in PBS-T, and probed as described above.
Analysis of data.
Flow cytometric analysis was performed
with either the Cellquest or Cell Lysis analysis software (Becton
Dickinson). Statistical analysis was performed with JMP software (SAS
Institute Inc., Cary, N.C.). Two-tailed independent t test
or analysis of variance models, which account for the effects of virus
type, dose, and experiment, were used. In the analysis of variance
models, tests for differences between virus type were performed by
using individual linear contrasts in which the effects of dose and
experimental variation have been removed.
HIV infection renders T cells more susceptible to Fas killing.
We wanted to ascertain if infected cells were more or less resistant to
Fas-induced death than their uninfected counterparts. To determine the
susceptibility of HIV-infected cells to Fas-induced apoptosis, we used
the Jurkat T-cell line because it is responsive to Fas-induced death
upon the addition of certain anti-Fas antibodies. We used the HIV type
1 (HIV-1) isolate NL4-3 because of the readily available mutants that
could be used to map any effect of HIV infection on Fas killing.
NL4-3-infected Jurkat cells were cultured for 20 to 24 h in the
presence of either a Fas antibody that induced death (CH-11) or an
antibody that bound Fas but did not cause death (M33) (1).
The number of infected cells was then determined by staining cells for
the presence of the intracellular HIV antigen Gag and analyzing
fluorescence patterns with flow cytometry (Fig. 1B). We found that the number of infected
cells in the live population was reduced in the cultures treated with
CH-11 but not M33 (Fig. 1A). We determined the percent survival by
dividing the number of live infected cells in the CH-11 treatment group
by the number of live infected cells in the M33 treatment group (Fig.
1A and B). The killing induced by antibody CH-11 was dose responsive, with the lowest dose (6 ng/ml) resulting in more infected cell survival
(77%) than the 25-ng/ml dose (68%) (Fig. 1A). However, the effect
plateaued at higher doses, with 65% survival seen at the 100-ng/ml
dose of CH-11. This effect was reproducible over a large range of
infected cell percentages (26 to 85%). We conclude that infected cells
are more susceptible to Fas-induced death than uninfected cells in the
same culture.
0022-538X/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Vpu Increases Susceptibility of Human
Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1-Infected Cells to Fas Killing
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ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References
-galactosidase (
-Gal) indicator cells were maintained in Dulbecco
modified Eagle medium supplemented with 7% fetal calf serum (FCS;
Gemini Bioproducts, Calabasas, Calif.). CD4+
-Gal
indicator cells were also cultured in the presence of G418 (200 µg/ml; Mediatech, Inc., Herndon, Va.) and hygromycin B (100 µg/ml;
Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.). Jurkat T cells, CEM T cells, and CD4+ human PBLs were cultured in RPMI supplemented with
10% FCS, and penicillin G (100 U/ml), and streptomycin (100 µg/ml).
PBLs were isolated by Ficoll-Hypaque (Pharmacia, Piscataway, N.J.)
density gradient centrifugation of heparinized blood obtained from
healthy donors. CD4+ cells were purified by negative
selection. PBLs were incubated with 20 µg of anti-CD8 (OKT8; American
Type Culture Collection) per ml and applied to a column of goat
anti-mouse immunoglobulin G-coated Immulon beads (Biotecx Laboratories,
Houston, Tex.). The purified cell population, 80 to 95%
CD4+, was cultured in medium containing phytohemagglutinin
(2.5 µg/ml; Murex, Research Triangle Park, N.C.) for 3 days before infection.
Vif), p210-19 (5'
Vpr), p210-13 (3'
Vpu), and p210-5 (3'
Nef) were obtained from
Ronald Desrosiers from the AIDS Research and Reference Reagent Program
(20). Each half of the proviral DNA (3 µg) was cut with
EcoRI, ligated, and used to transfect 293 cells by the
2-bromoethanesulfonic acid transfection method (58). Culture
supernatants were collected 24 to 48 h after transfection and used
to infect CEM T cells in the presence of DEAE-dextran (20 µg/ml). At
7 to 10 days after infection, culture supernatants were clarified by
centrifugation at 250 × g, collected, and frozen at
75°C. Viral titers were measured on CD4+
-Gal
indicator cells as described previously (33). The mutant lacking the second exon of tat (TatSE) was made by changing
the sequence of the first amino acid of the second exon of TatSE from CAG to TAG by PCR cloning in the vector p83-10. Sequence analysis was
performed to ensure that only the desired nucleotide was changed. Virus
was made as described above. To ensure that the NL4-3
TatSE virus had
not reverted its genotype, viral stocks were used to infect Jurkat
cells, cell lysates were collected, and PCR was used to amplify the Tat
region of the cellular proviral DNA. The Tat region was cloned into a
sequencing vector, and five bacterial colonies of each viral stock were
checked for reversion to wild type by sequence analysis. All colonies
tested contained the stop codon mutation and had not reverted.
Vpu, and mock-infected
Jurkat T cells were induced to undergo Fas death as described above.
The cells were harvested 20 to 24 h after Fas antibody incubation,
washed once in PBS, and incubated with 5 µl of annexin V-FITC (Caltag
Laboratories, Burlingame, Calif.) in 100 µl of binding buffer (BB;
2.5 mM CaCl2, 10 mM HEPES-NaOH [pH 7.4], 140 mM NaCl) for
15 min in the dark. The cells were then washed twice in BB, resuspended
in 150 µl of BB and 50 µl of 4% paraformaldehyde, and incubated
for 30 min. After fixing, the cells were washed twice in BB and then
stained for Gag antigen as described above except that 2.5 mM
CaCl2 was included in the mixture. Following Gag staining,
the cells were washed twice in BB, resuspended in BB, and kept at 4°C
until analysis on a FACScan (Becton Dickinson). In the Fas killing
experiment with the Jurkat cell clones described above, annexin V
binding was tested as follows. The cells were washed once in PBS and
then resuspended in 100 µl of BB plus 4 to 5 µl of annexin V-biotin (Caltag) for 15 min at room temperature. The cells were washed with 1 ml of BB and incubated with 4 µl of streptavidin-peridinin chlorophyl
protein (PerCP) (Becton Dickinson) in 100 µl of BB for 15 min in the
dark at room temperature. The cells were placed in 400 µl of cold BB
and analyzed on a FACScan flow cytometer within 1 h of staining.
![]()
RESULTS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References

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FIG. 1.
HIV-infected Jurkat T cells are more susceptible to Fas
killing. This effect maps to Vpu. (A) Jurkat T cells infected with
NL4-3 were incubated for 22 h in the presence of the indicated
amounts of anti-Fas antibody CH-11. Survival was calculated by the
following formula: % Gag+ cells following CH-11 antibody
treatment/% Gag+ cells following M33 antibody treatment.
Percent survival was calculated for each concentration of CH-11 used
(0, 6, 25, and 100 ng/ml). The results are shown as mean ± standard error of 12 independent experiments with duplicate samples in
each experiment. (B) Measurement of viral infection and enhanced
survival of NL4-3
Vpu-infected cells. Histograms show infected Jurkat
T cells treated with antibodies M33 and CH-11 (100 ng/ml) stained for
the presence of intracellular Gag. The cells represented in the
histogram were gated through the live cell population. Numbers over
markers represent proportions of Gag+ cells in the
population; numbers at the right represent percent survival of
Gag+ cells treated with 100 ng of antibody CH-11 per ml as
calculated for panel A. The apparent increase in Gag+ cells
seen with the NL4-3
Vpr compared to NL4-3 is not reproducible and is
most likely due to experimental variation. (C) Fas killing experiments
of NL4-3 and mutant viruses were performed as described in Materials
and Methods. NL4-3 is represented in all graphs with square boxes;
individual mutant viruses, indicated in the upper right of each graph,
are depicted by diamonds. The graphs represent the means ± standard errors of eight, three, four, two, or three independent
experiments, each performed in duplicate for NL4-3
Vpu, NL4-3
Nef,
NL4-3
Vpr, NL4-3
Vif, or NL4-3
TatSE compared to NL4-3 in those
experiments, respectively. Percent survival is represented as in panel
A. (D and E) Western blots of infected cell lysates. (D) Blot probed
with rabbit anti-Vpu antiserum; (E) the blot in panel D, stripped and
reprobed with a monoclonal mouse anti-Gag antibody.
The increased sensitivity to Fas killing maps to Vpu.
To
determine which viral gene(s) contributed to the increased sensitivity
of HIV-infected cells to Fas killing, we infected Jurkat T cells with
replication-competent proviral genomes (NL4-3) deleted singly in either
Vpr, Vif, Nef, TatSE, or Vpu. We determined the percent survival of the
mutant viruses in comparison to wild-type NL4-3 in the Fas killing
assay described above (Fig. 1C). We found no large difference in the
ability of viruses deleted in Vpr, Vif, Nef, or TatSE compared to
wild-type NL4-3 to induce sensitivity to Fas killing (Fig. 1B and C).
However, there was on average a 20% increase in survival of infected
cells deleted in Vpu over all tested concentrations of antibody CH-11
(Fig. 1B and C). To confirm that the virus used was deficient for Vpu,
we performed a Western blot analysis of cell lysates from cells
infected with either NL4-3 or NL4-3
Vpu (Fig. 1D). When the cell
lysates were probed with the anti-Vpu antiserum, Vpu was seen only in
infections with wild-type virus. As a control, equal amounts of Gag
were detected in both the NL4-3- and the NL4-3
Vpu-infected cell
lysates (Fig. 1E). Hence, expression of Vpu in HIV-infected cells
increases their susceptibility to Fas killing.
Primary cells infected with HIV are more sensitive to Fas-induced
death; this effect is diminished after infection with Vpu-deleted
viruses.
To determine whether the results obtained with Jurkat T
cells were reproducible in primary cells, we performed the Fas killing experiments with primary human PBLs enriched for CD4+
cells. We infected CD4+ PBLs with NL4-3 or NL4-3
Vpu
virus and then cultured these cells in the presence or absence of the
anti-Fas antibody CH-11 or M33 for 48 h. The percentage of
infected cells remaining in the Fas-treated cultures was determined by
staining the infected cells intracellularly with an anti-Gag antibody
and subsequent flow cytometric analysis (Fig.
2A). Figure 2B shows the results of three
independent experiments with CD4+ PBLs from two different
blood donors. Not only were the NL4-3-infected cells more susceptible
to Fas killing (60% survival), but the effect was partially reversed
by using a virus lacking Vpu (83% survival) (Fig. 2B). This result was
statistically significant, using the two-tailed independent
t test at P < 0.025. Thus, primary cells
show the same effect seen in Jurkat cells: HIV-infected cells are more
susceptible to Fas killing, and deletion of Vpu from the virus
diminishes this effect.
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HIV-infected cells are more apoptotic in response to Fas
killing.
To determine whether the decrease in infected cells in
response to antibody CH-11 treatment can be attributed to a higher level of infected cell apoptosis, we stained Jurkat T cells after Fas
antibody treatment for apoptosis and infection (Fig.
3). We saw no consistent difference
between apoptosis in infected cells and apoptosis in mock-infected
cultures when all cells (live, apoptotic, and dead) in the scatter plot
were used to assess apoptosis and infection (data not shown). This was
due either to an inability to detect late-stage apoptotic infected
cells or to the loss of these cells from the culture. This
interpretation was substantiated by our observation that the intensity
of the Gag stain decreased in apoptotic cells and that there was an
overall loss of cells from Fas CH-11-treated cultures (data not shown).
To circumvent these problems, we examined apoptosis only in the live
population of cells (R1; Fig. 3A to D). Annexin V staining appears to
be an early step in apoptosis, occurring before cell shrinkage and changing of the scatter properties of the cell (36).
Furthermore, cells in the live R1 region excluded compounds like
7-aminoactinomycin D that stain necrotic cells (data not shown). By
gating through the live population of cells, we detect only cells in
the early phase of apoptosis, not annexin-positive, necrotic cells.
With this live gate, we detected a significant increase in the
apoptosis in NL4-3-infected cells over mock infected cells
(P < 3
10) (Fig. 3E). Also, consistent
with our findings that infected cell loss is lower in cells infected
with NL4-3
Vpu, there was significantly less apoptosis in
NL4-3
Vpu-infected cells than in NL4-3 infected cells (P < 6
5) (Fig. 3E).
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population in infected cultures (Fig.
3A to C). This higher level of apoptosis could be due to an increase in
death of uninfected cells in infected cultures or to death of newly
infected cells that have yet to express sufficient levels of Gag to be
detected by our antibody.
Vpu-expressing Jurkat T-cell clones are more susceptible to Fas killing. To determine if Vpu alone can result in an increased sensitivity to Fas-induced death or if other HIV gene products are also required, we expressed Vpu in Jurkat cells and tested their susceptibility to death induced by Fas cross-linking. We created Jurkat T-cell clones expressing either Vpu linked by an IRES to GFP or GFP expressed alone (control clones) (Fig. 4A). We were able to isolate several Vpu and control Jurkat cell clones that expressed GFP. However, we were not able to obtain clones that expressed levels of Vpu as high as those seen in infected cells (Fig. 4B). It is possible that there are differences in the strength of the HIV promoter and the murine long terminal repeat promoter used in our clones. Alternatively, high levels of stable Vpu expression might be toxic to the cell. We stained each clone for surface Fas expression and isolated four control and three Vpu-expressing clones in which surface expression of Fas was equivalent to that in the parental Jurkat T-cell line (data not shown). The parental Jurkat cell line and the clones were incubated with anti-Fas antibodies CH-11 and M33, and the amount of cell death was determined by annexin V staining. Figure 4C shows the average amount of cell death over the parental Jurkat cell line for the control clones (0.4%) and the average amount of death for the Vpu-expressing clones (18%). The difference in Fas killing between the control and Vpu-expressing clones was statistically significant at P < 0.0002.
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DISCUSSION |
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In this study, we assessed the susceptibility of HIV-infected cells to Fas-induced death. We showed that Fas receptor cross-linking by the anti-Fas antibody CH-11 decreased the number of live infected cells in the culture and resulted in increased levels of infected cell apoptosis. Our results are in agreement with those of Kobayshi et al., who found a decrease in cell viability in HIV-infected cultures treated with an anti-Fas antibody (35). We have expanded on the results of Kobayshi et al. by testing primary PBLs. Also, we increased the sensitivity of the assay by using flow cytometry to quantify the number of infected cells lost. This assay allowed us to perform mapping studies to determine which viral gene is responsible for the increased Fas killing of infected cells.
We found that deleting Nef, Vif, Vpr, or TatSE from HIV-1 had little or no effect on the susceptibility of infected cells to Fas-induced death. Of the gene products tested, only Vpu seemed to have a large effect on susceptibility to Fas-induced apoptosis. Deletion of Vpu from HIV increased survival in response to Fas cross-linking by an average of 20% in Jurkat T cells and by 23% in CD4+-enriched PBLs. We also detected enhanced death in Jurkat cell clones expressing Vpu compared to control clones. It is interesting that even the low levels of Vpu expressed in our Jurkat cell clones were correlated with increase Fas-induced death. It appears that levels of viral RNA are about 4- to 15-fold lower in PBLs in vivo than in tissue culture-infected PBLs (28). Thus, while levels of Vpu in the Jurkat cell clones might not approximate in vitro infection levels, they could be closer to levels seen in an in vivo infection.
Deleting Vpu from HIV did not completely abolish the sensitivity of HIV-1-infected cells to Fas killing. It has been reported that CD4 cross-linking by Env and anti-CD4 antibodies can cause an increase in Fas expression levels (2, 53, 74) and that Tat can increase FasL expression (75). Also, addition of Tat and Env gp120 exogenously to cells increases their sensitivity to Fas-induced death (75). Furthermore, expression of Tat alone in cells has been shown to increase their susceptibility to Fas-induced death (37). Thus, it is possible that in addition to Vpu, the first exon of Tat and gp120 also act to increase the susceptibility of HIV-infected cells to Fas killing.
How might Vpu make cells more sensitive to Fas killing? Vpu is a 16-kDa type I integral membrane protein (43) that has been detected in the Golgi and endoplasmic reticular membranes (60). Since there are no antibodies that can sensitively detect the presence of small amounts of Vpu, we do not know if small amounts of Vpu are found in other cellular membranes or in the virion. Vpu has been ascribed two separate functions in the life cycle of HIV. One is its ability to enhance virus release from infected cells (34, 68, 71, 79). This property is not restricted to HIV, as Vpu can also enhance the release of virus particles from retroviruses distantly related to HIV (22). The other known role of Vpu in the virus life cycle is the disruption of envelope glycoprotein-CD4 interactions in the endoplasmic reticulum (76, 77). Vpu appears to interact with the cytoplasmic tail of CD4, targeting it to a proteosome where CD4 is degraded (8, 18, 40, 44, 61, 73, 77). The two functions of Vpu can be separated into distinct regions of the protein. The transmembrane region of Vpu appears to be responsible for the increase in virus release, while its cytoplasmic tail is needed for CD4 degradation (62, 64).
Vpu is structurally similar to the ion channel protein M2 of influenza virus (67). This similarity has led some workers to investigate the potential ion channel properties of Vpu. Vpu seems able to form cation-selective ion channels in planar lipid bilayers, in Escherichia coli, and in Xenopus oocytes (16, 63). The ion channel activity of Vpu appears to map to the transmembrane region of the protein. Scrambling the amino acids in the transmembrane portion of Vpu abolishes its ion channel-forming ability while still allowing Vpu to insert into membranes (63). Because the ion channel and the increased virus release function of Vpu both map to the transmembrane region, it has been postulated that Vpu's formation of ion channels augments virus release. However, the means by which Vpu's ion channel activity might increase virus release is not clear. Although the idea that Vpu forms ion channels is gaining wider acceptance, more work needs to be done to clearly demonstrate that it occurs in infected cells (38).
It is tempting to speculate that the ion channel properties of Vpu
cause the cells to be more responsive to apoptotic stimuli. Perturbations of K levels in neurons and decreased K levels in T cells
have been shown to cause apoptosis (6, 15, 48, 65, 70).
Also, Bcl-2, Bcl-XL, and BAX have all been shown to have ion channel
properties (5, 45, 58, 59, 61). These proteins play an
important role in regulating apoptosis in a wide variety of cells
(54, 80). BAX and Bcl-2 also seem to regulate mitochondrial
membrane potential (
) (69, 78). Perturbations of

appear to be one of the earliest events of apoptosis. Because
Vpu might also have ion channel properties, we tried to ascertain if
Vpu might also perturb 
. These preliminary studies did not show
any correlation between Vpu's expression and changes in 
(data
not shown). Other potential mechanisms by which Vpu increases
sensitivity to Fas killing are currently being studied in our lab.
Why would HIV encode a gene that causes it to be more susceptible to Fas-induced death? Since there is no homolog of Vpu in simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV), it has been difficult to determine whether this gene contributes to the pathogenesis of the virus. However, studies have been performed with a chimeric virus, SHIV, that contains the 5' half of SIV and 3' half of HIV HXB-2. Since the Vpu start codon of HXB-2 has been altered to ACG, it is also altered in the chimera, SHIV. When SHIV was recovered from a pig-tailed macaque that developed AIDS-like symptoms, the ACG of Vpu had reverted to ATG (66). Also, in a study (41) that used SHIVs that either did or did not contain a functional Vpu to infect cynomolgus monkeys, monkeys infected with the Vpu containing viruses showed higher levels of viral RNA in plasma and greater Env variation than monkeys infected with a Vpu-nonexpressing SHIV. The greater Env variation seen in Vpu+ SHIV infection is more characteristic of human infection with HIV (41). Furthermore, HIV-2, which also does not contain Vpu, has retained the ability to enhance virion release. This function performed by Vpu in HIV-1 is performed by Env in HIV-2 (7). From these studies, it appears that Vpu has a function that is beneficial to the viral life cycle. Thus, any deleterious effects of Vpu, such as an increase in Fas-induced death, might be overshadowed by the ability of the virus to augment virus replication.
| |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank Gary P. Nolan for the Phoenix retroviral cell lines, Inder M. Verma for pCLXSN and pCLAmpho retroviral vectors, Elaine K. Thomas and Immunex for anti-Fas antibody M33, and the AIDS Research and Reference Reagent Program, Division of AIDS, NIAID, NIH, for supplying Ronald Desrosier's viral constructs p83-2, p83-10, p197-1, p210-19, p210-13, and p210-5, and for supplying Frank Maldarelli and Klaus Strebel's antiserum against Vpu. We thank Thomas C. Mitchell for critical reading of the manuscript and David Ikle for help with the statistical analysis.
This work was supported by NIH grants RO1-AI40003, RO1-AI35513 (T.H.F.), and NRSA-AI9740 (C.R.C.); the Bender Foundation (T.H.F.); the Eleanore and Michael Stobin Trust (T.H.F.); and the UCHSC Cancer Center (T.H.F.).
| |
FOOTNOTES |
|---|
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: National Jewish Medical and Research Center, 1400 Jackson St., Denver, CO 80206. Phone: (303) 398-1408. Fax: (303) 398-1225. E-mail: finkelt{at}njc.org.
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