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Journal of Virology, December 2000, p. 11001-11007, Vol. 74, No. 23
0022-538X/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Dynamics of CCR5 Expression by CD4+ T
Cells in Lymphoid Tissues during Simian Immunodeficiency Virus
Infection
Ronald S.
Veazey,1,*
Keith G.
Mansfield,2
Irene C.
Tham,1
Angela C.
Carville,2
Daniel E.
Shvetz,1
Amy E.
Forand,3 and
Andrew A.
Lackner1
Divisions of
Pathology,1 Primate
Medicine,2 and
Immunology,3 New England Regional
Primate Research Center, Harvard Medical School, Southborough,
Massachusetts 01772
Received 19 June 2000/Accepted 7 September 2000
 |
ABSTRACT |
Early viral replication and profound CD4+ T-cell
depletion occur preferentially in intestinal tissues of macaques
infected with simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV). Here we show that a much higher percentage of CD4+ T cells in the intestine
express CCR5 compared with those found in the peripheral blood, spleen,
or lymph nodes. In addition, the selectivity and extent of the
CD4+ T-cell loss in SIV infection may depend upon these
cells coexpressing CCR5 and having a "memory" phenotype
(CD45RA
). Following intravenous infection with SIVmac251,
memory CD4+ CCR5+ T cells were selectively
eliminated within 14 days in all major lymphoid tissues (intestine,
spleen, and lymph nodes). However, the effect on CD4+
T-cell numbers was most profound in the intestine, where cells of this
phenotype predominate. The CD4+ T cells that remain after
14 days of infection lacked CCR5 and/or were naive
(CD45RA+). Furthermore, when animals in the terminal stages
of SIV infection (with AIDS) were examined, virtually no
CCR5-expressing CD4+ T cells were found in lymphoid
tissues, and all of the remaining CD4+ T cells were naive
and coexpressed CXCR4. These findings suggest that chemokine receptor
usage determines which cells are targeted for SIV infection and
elimination in vivo.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Recent studies with the simian
immunodeficiency virus (SIV) macaque model of AIDS have demonstrated
that most of the viral replication and CD4+ T-cell loss
initially occurs within the gastrointestinal tract, regardless of the
route of exposure (10, 24, 26, 28). Since SIV and human
immunodeficiency virus (HIV) optimally replicate within activated
memory CD4+ T cells in vitro, and most lymphocytes in the
intestinal lamina propria are of this phenotype (2-5, 13, 15, 16,
22, 23, 25, 27, 31, 32), this partially explains why the
intestine is a preferred target for SIV replication and early
CD4+ T-cell loss. Moreover, it has recently been
demonstrated that, in addition to intestinal CD4+ T-cell
depletion, a selective loss of activated memory (CD45RA
)
CD4+ T cells (effector CD4+ T cells) can be
detected in peripheral blood and lymph nodes of macaques within a few
weeks of viral infection (30). However, since peripheral
lymphoid tissues consist primarily of resting, naive
(CD45RA+) cells, this selective loss does not result in a
significant reduction in overall CD4+ T-cell numbers.
Although HIV and SIV require cellular activation for optimal viral
replication, it is still not known how these viruses distinguish effector CD4+ T cells from resting, naive CD4+
T cells. Although integrated provirus can be detected within naive
CD4+ T cells (33), multiple studies have
confirmed that the majority of cell-associated virus is found within
memory CD4+ T cells (17, 19, 23). It is apparent
that the virus is primarily targeting activated memory CD4+
T cells for viral attachment and entry, as well as for optimal replication. How then, does the virus recognize and distinguish effector from naive CD4+ T cells?
A crucial piece of the puzzle was provided by a series of discoveries
involving chemokine receptors. First, the discovery that chemokine
receptors were the coreceptors for HIV and SIV infection explained why
only certain cells could be infected with HIV. It is now
well-established that, in addition to the CD4 molecule, HIV and SIV
require one or more chemokine receptors as coreceptors for attachment
and entry into host cells. Moreover, like most primary isolates of HIV,
SIVmac utilizes both CD4 and the chemokine receptor CCR5 for
attachment, fusion, and entry into host cells (1, 14). Later
studies demonstrated that a correlation exists between naive and memory
lymphocyte subsets and the expression of particular chemokine
receptors. In normal human blood, CXCR4 is expressed primarily on
naive lymphocytes (CD45RA+), whereas CCR5 expression is
primarily limited to memory lymphocytes (CD45RO+)
(20). Finally, experiments using SIV/HIV chimera viruses
(SHIVs) suggest that chemokine receptor usage may determine which
CD4+ T cells are targeted. SHIVs that strictly utilize
CXCR4 rapidly deplete CD4+ T cells in peripheral blood, but
spare intestinal CD4+ T cells. In contrast, a SHIV that
exclusively utilizes CCR5 depletes intestinal CD4+ T cells,
but spares peripheral blood CD4+ T cells (8).
This study suggested that chemokine receptor usage was involved in
determining which CD4+ T cells (mucosal versus peripheral)
were depleted in SIV infection. However, chemokine receptor expression
on subsets of mucosal CD4+ T cells during acute infection
has not been examined.
In the current study, we have addressed the role that CCR5 plays in the
selective elimination of effector CD4+ T cells in early and
late stages of SIV infection. The following questions were specifically
addressed. How does CCR5 expression correlate with activation and
memory markers on macaque CD4+ T cells in various lymphoid
tissues?. Are there larger percentages of CCR5-expressing
CD4+ T lymphocytes in the intestine than there are
CCR5-expressing peripheral blood or lymph node CD4+ T
lymphocytes? Finally, are CCR5-expressing CD4+ T
lymphocytes selectively depleted in peripheral and mucosal lymphoid
tissues in early SIV infection? We hypothesized that if the depletion
of effector CD4+ T cells was dependent on coreceptor usage,
animals sacrificed in all stages of infection should be markedly
depleted of effector CD4+ T cells coexpressing CCR5.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animals and virus.
A total of 15 rhesus macaques
(Macaca mulatta) were used to examine lymphocyte subsets in
peripheral blood, systemic lymphoid tissues, and intestine. In
prospective studies, sequential changes in peripheral blood and
intestinal lymphocyte subsets were examined in six 2- to 3-year-old
rhesus macaques. Three of these animals (mm158-99, mm169-99, and
mm170-99) were killed at 14 days postinfection (p.i.), and changes in
lymphocyte subsets in the spleen and axillary and mesenteric lymph
nodes were also examined. Sampling occurred before infection (day 0)
and at 7, 14, 21, 35, and 63 days after intravenous infection with 50 ng of SIVmac251. Controls consisted of blood and intestinal biopsies
collected from three uninfected macaques and blood, spleen, axillary
and mesenteric lymph nodes collected from two additional uninfected
macaques killed for other studies. The same tissues were collected at
necropsy from an additional four macaques that developed AIDS within 4 to 6 months of intravenous infection with SIVmac251. All animals were
maintained in accordance with the standards of the American Association
for Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care and the guidelines of the
Committee on Animals of Harvard Medical School.
Cell isolation and flow cytometry.
Peripheral blood and
intestinal lymphocytes were stained and analyzed by flow cytometry as
previously described (28-30). Briefly, jejunal pinch
biopsies were incubated with 1 mM EDTA in Hanks balanced salt solution
for 30 min, followed by 1 h in RPMI containing 20 U of collagenase
per ml while rapidly shaking at 37°C. No attempts were made to
separate intestinal epithelial lymphocytes from lamina propria
lymphocytes in biopsy samples. Biopsies were further disrupted, and
single-cell suspensions were prepared by pipetting 5 to 10 times with a
16-g feeding needle. Lymphocytes were then enriched by Percoll density
gradient centrifugation. To ensure that CCR5 expression was not being
up-regulated on intestinal cells due to these isolation procedures,
whole blood from one macaque was similarly treated, and levels of CCR5
expression on lymphocytes were compared before and after treatment. A
slightly lower percentage of CCR5 receptors were detected on
lymphocytes after treatment (2.9% CCR5+) when compared to
whole blood staining (3.1% CCR5+). Since Ficoll
purification of cells has been reported to transiently down-regulate
chemokine receptor expression (11, 12), the Percoll density
gradient centrifugation step was most likely responsible for this
slight decrease.
Peripheral blood samples were stained by a whole-blood staining
procedure, with the exception of samples obtained from macaques mm352,
mm353, and mm356-96 in which peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs)
were obtained by Ficoll density gradient separation. However, since we
were examining changes in chemokine receptor expression over time, and
since PBMCs were always used in these three animals (before and after
infection), this did not significantly affect the results of this study.
Cells from all tissues were stained for four-color flow cytometry with
monoclonal antibodies to CD4 allophycocyamin (APC), CD8PerCP,
CD45RA-fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) conjugate (Becton Dickinson),
and either CCR5-phycoerythrin (PE) conjugate (clone 3A9) or CXCR4-PE
conjugate (Pharmingen). Since CD45RO does not reliably cross-react with
macaque lymphocytes, CD4+ lymphocytes are defined in this
report as either naive (CD45RA+) or memory
(CD45RA
) by a previously described rationale and
methodology (28). Samples were acquired on a FACS Calibur
flow cytometer and analyzed with Cell Quest software (Becton Dickinson).
Statistics.
Statistical analyses were performed with a
paired Student's t test and commercial statistical software
(Sigma Plot, SPSS). P values <0.05 were considered significant.
 |
RESULTS |
Lymphocytes from the intestine have much higher CCR5 expression
than lymphocytes from blood.
First, we established that chemokine
receptor expression patterns were similar between macaque lymphocytes
and those reported for human lymphocytes (20). We examined
the expression of CCR5 and CXCR4 in combination with CD45RA (a naive
cell marker) on both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells by
four-color flow cytometry. As in humans (20), the majority of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells from macaque
blood that expressed CCR5 were memory (CD45RALO), whereas
most of the T cells in the blood that were naive (CD45RAHI)
coexpressed CXCR4 (Fig. 1).

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FIG. 1.
Comparison of CCR5 and CXCR4 expression on normal
(uninfected) CD4+ T lymphocytes from the jejunum to those
of peripheral blood. Note that very few (~5%) peripheral blood
CD4+ lymphocytes express CCR5, whereas most (~60%)
intestinal CD4+ lymphocytes express CCR5. Also note that
CCR5 expression and CD45RA expression are relatively mutually
exclusive; most naive CD4 cells (CD45RAHI) do not express
CCR5, whereas CCR5HI cells are CD45RALO. In
contrast, most peripheral blood CD4 cells express CXCR4.
CD45RAHI cells are usually CXCR4HI. The dot
plots shown were generated by first gating through CD4+ T
lymphocytes and are representative of uninfected animals (except that
the macaque with the highest CCR5 expression in the peripheral blood
was selected for illustration of CD45RA coexpression). Graphs represent
the mean of six animals examined ± standard deviation.
|
|
We then determined and compared baseline expression of chemokine
receptors on naive and memory CD4+ T cells from lymphocytes
isolated from the intestine, lymph nodes, and peripheral blood of
normal macaques. Significant (P < 0.05) differences in
the percentages of lymphocytes expressing chemokine receptors were
observed between CD4+ T cells obtained from peripheral
lymphoid tissues and those from the intestine (Fig. 1). Only a small
percentage (5%) of CD4+ lymphocytes from peripheral blood
expressed CCR5, whereas the majority (60%) of intestinal
CD4+ T cells were CCR5 bright (Fig. 1). Conversely, most
CD4+ T lymphocytes in peripheral blood expressed CXCR4
(77%), whereas less than half of the intestinal CD4+ T
cells expressed CXCR4 (Fig. 1). Dual expression of CXCR4 and CCR5
receptors was evident on a significant proportion of intestinal CD4+ T cells (data not shown). In blood, CD4+ T
cells expressing CXCR4 were predominantly CD45RAHI, but
since the vast majority of intestinal CD4+ T cells lack
CD45RA, this was not always true for normal intestinal CD4+
T cells. In other words, intestinal CD4+ T cells that
expressed CXCR4 usually lacked CD45RA, but CD4+ T cells
from both blood and intestine that expressed CCR5+ usually
lacked CD45RA expression (Fig. 1).
CD4+ T cells expressing CCR5 are selectively eliminated
in acute SIV infection.
Changes in chemokine receptor expression
on CD4+ T cells were then examined with intestinal and
peripheral blood lymphocytes in very early SIV infection. Six adult
macaques were intravenously inoculated with SIVmac251, three of which
were killed at 14 days p.i. The other three were monitored for 9 weeks
p.i. Immunophenotyping of blood and intestinal lymphocytes was
performed before viral inoculation (day 0) and on days 14, 21, 35, and
63 p.i. As expected from previous studies, intestinal
CD4+ T cells were markedly (and selectively) depleted
within 14 days p.i. in all animals. Although CD4+ T cells
comprised 50 to 60% of the total intestinal T-cell population before
infection, only 5 to 10% of the remaining T cells expressed CD4 by 14 days of infection (Fig. 2).

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FIG. 2.
Dot plots showing CD4 T-cell depletion due to SIV
infection in the intestinal mucosa of three macaques. Intestinal
lymphocytes were obtained from endoscopic pinch biopsies from the
jejunum of the same animals at different time points (prospective
studies). Plots were generated by gating through CD3+
lymphocytes. From left to right, note the rapid loss of
CD4+ T cells within 14 days after infection. Also note that
CD4+ CD8+ DP cells (upper right quadrants) are
more profoundly eliminated than the CD4+ SP population. DP
cells were essentially eliminated by 14 days p.i. and did not return in
the time points examined, whereas some SP CD4+ T cells
return by 35 days p.i. (lower right quadrants).
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|
Gating through the remaining CD4+ T cells revealed that
virtually all of the memory (CD45RALO) CCR5+
helper cells had been eliminated by 14 days p.i. in all six animals (Fig. 3). Since 45 to 75% of the
CD4+ T cells were CD45RALO and
CCR5HI in the same animals just 14 days prior (day 0), this
indicated that a profound elimination of memory CD4+ T
cells coexpressing CCR5 had occurred within this short time frame. It
is important to emphasize, however, that not all CCR5-expressing CD4+ T cells were eliminated by this time point. In three
animals (mm170-99, mm352-96, and mm353-96), over half of the remaining CD4+ T cells coexpressed CCR5 (Fig. 3). However, these
residual CCR5-expressing cells were virtually all naive
(CD45RAHI), suggesting that they were either recently
recruited to or newly formed within the intestinal mucosa (Fig. 3).

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FIG. 3.
Dot plots demonstrating selective depletion of the
CD45RALO CCR5HI subset of CD4+ T
cells in the intestine within 14 days p.i. All plots were generated by
first gating through CD4+ T lymphocytes; top panels are
from intestinal biopsies taken before infection (day 0), and bottom
panels correspond to the same animals and region 14 days after SIV
infection (prospective analysis). Before infection, 45 to 75% of the
CD4+ T cells are both memory (CD45RALO) and
CCR5HI (upper left quadrants). After infection, virtually
all of this memory CCR5HI subset of CD4+ T
cells has been selectively depleted in all six animals examined. The
remaining CD4+ T cells are either CD45RAHI
CCR5HI (upper right) or lack CCR5 expression (lower left
and right).
|
|
Additional evidence for selective targeting and depletion of memory
CCR5+ T cells came from four-color analysis of a unique
population of T cells in the proximal intestine. As previously
described, macaques have a substantial (yet variable) number of
CD4+ CD8+ double-positive (DP) T cells in the
lamina propria of the jejunum (28, 29). This particular
population of DP cells appears to be unique, since they do not share
the same phenotypic markers as DP cells found in the thymus. These DP
cells do not express CD34 (a stem cell marker) or CD45RA, but are all
CD69HI, suggesting they are activated memory cells rather
than immature precursor cells (data not shown). Moreover, these DP
cells are consistently eliminated from the intestine in early SIV
infection at a rate that exceeds the loss of single-positive (SP)
CD4+ T cells (Fig. 2). The rate of cell loss as determined
by the mean slope of the line between day 0 and day 14 was
1.7 for DP cells versus
1.3 for SP cells (Fig.
4A). This is most likely an
underestimation, since almost all of the DP cells had been eliminated
by day 14 p.i. This suggests that intestinal DP T cells are better
targets for viral infection and destruction than SP CD4+ T
cells.

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FIG. 4.
(A) Comparison of the rate of DP CD4+
CD8+ to SP (CD4+) intestinal T-cell depletion
after 14 days of SIV infection. Note that approximately equal
percentages of DP and SP cells are present in the jejunum of uninfected
animals, but the DP cells are virtually eliminated by day 14 p.i.
A few (mean, 7%) SP cells remain, indicating that a selective
depletion of DP cells is occurring, as indicated by the slope of the
lines. Points represent the mean of six animals ± standard
deviation. Percentages were determined by gating through
CD3+ lymphocytes. (B) Four-color flow cytometry
demonstrating that DP intestinal T cells from normal (uninfected)
macaques are virtually all CCR5HI, whereas a significant
proportion of the SP T cells lack CCR5 expression. Also note that both
DP and SP T cells lack significant CD45RA expression. Plots were
generated by gating through intestinal lymphocytes.
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|
To account for their increased rate of elimination in early SIV
infection, we hypothesized that more DP cells would express CCR5, which
in fact, proved to be the case. By four-color flow cytometry, DP cells
from uninfected animals were virtually all CCR5+ (Fig. 4B)
and also demonstrated significantly lower expression of CXCR4 than
their CD4+ SP counterparts (data not shown). Combined,
these data suggest that intestinal DP cells are highly activated,
terminally differentiated effector lymphocytes, and not newly formed
T-cell progenitor cells like the DP cells found in the thymus. We
hypothesize that it is the coexpression of both CD4 and CCR5 in
conjunction with their high level of activation that leads to optimal
(and presumably lytic) viral replication, which would explain why they
are eliminated from the intestinal tract of animals at a rate that
exceeds the loss of SP cells.
The loss of CCR5+ effector CD4+ T cells was not
limited to the intestinal tract. Examination of mesenteric and
peripheral lymph nodes and spleen (in animals that were killed)
demonstrated that CD4+ T cells expressing CCR5 were
markedly decreased in these tissues compared to that in uninfected
animals (Fig. 5). Moreover, examination of both peripheral and mucosal tissue sites by flow cytometry provided
additional evidence that the loss of these specific T-cell subsets was
due to elimination and not redistribution or compartmentalization.

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FIG. 5.
Comparison of CCR5 expression on CD4+ T
cells from peripheral lymphoid tissues of uninfected macaques to those
sacrificed at 14 days after SIV infection and those sacrificed with
advanced SIVmac251 infection (AIDS). Note that there are markedly fewer
CCR5-expressing CD4+ T cells in tissues from acutely
infected macaques, and animals with AIDS show profound depletion of
CCR5-expressing CD4+ T cells in all lymphoid tissues.
Graphs represent the mean of two to four different animals per group
(as indicated) ± standard deviation. Data were generated by
gating through CD4+ T lymphocytes.
|
|
In the three animals that were monitored for 9 weeks (mm352-96,
mm353-96, and mm356-96), effector CD4+ T cells did not
return to normal levels. However, two animals (mm352-96 and mm356-96)
did have a slight increase in intestinal CD4+ T lymphocytes
(up to 20% of CD3+ T cells) by day 35 p.i. (Fig. 2).
However, as observed in the 14-day samples, the majority of these
repopulating CD4+ T cells were CD45RAHI. This
suggests that attempts at intestinal CD4+ T-cell
replacement are being made in the early stage of infection, but this
supply apparently does not keep pace with the destruction of effector
CD4+ T lymphocytes.
CD4+ T cells expressing CCR5 are eliminated in macaques
with AIDS.
Marked differences in chemokine receptor expression on
CD4+ T cells were also detected in macaques sacrificed in
the later stages of SIV infection. In four out of four SIV-infected
animals sacrificed at the onset of AIDS (4 to 6 months p.i.), virtually all of the CD4+ T cells remaining in the peripheral blood,
lymph nodes, and intestinal tract were CCR5LO and
CXCR4HI (Fig. 6). In
addition, virtually all of the remaining CD4+ T cells in
peripheral blood, lymph nodes, and spleen coexpressed CD45RA,
indicating that all of the host's effector CD4+ T cells
had been eliminated, leaving only naive CD4+ T cells that
lacked CCR5. As in early infection, the loss of CCR5 effector cells was
limited to the CD4+ T-cell subset, since significant
proportions of CD8+ T cells continued to express CCR5 and
were CD45RA+/
(data not shown).

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FIG. 6.
Dot plots demonstrating profound loss of CCR5-expressing
CD4+ T cells in macaques sacrificed with advanced SIV
disease (AIDS). All plots were generated by gating through
CD4+ T lymphocytes. Top panels are representative of
uninfected macaques demonstrating CCR5HI cells in (from
left to right) the jejunum, axillary lymph node, and peripheral blood.
Note that in animals with AIDS, essentially all of the
CCR5HI as well as the memory (CD45RALO)
CD4+ T cells have been eliminated, leaving only
CXCR4HI and CD45RAHI cells. Plots are
representative of four animals with AIDS examined.
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|
 |
DISCUSSION |
These data demonstrate that the selectivity and degree of
CD4+ T-cell depletion in early SIV infection depend upon
both their level of CCR5 expression and the level of cell activation
and memory. Effector CD4+ T cells expressing CCR5 were
selectively eliminated within 14 days of SIV infection in all major
lymphoid tissues in all animals examined, whereas the CD4+
T cells that remained lacked CCR5 and/or were naive
(CD45RA+). Furthermore, the fact that significantly higher
percentages of intestinal CD4+ T cells express CCR5 may
explain why these cells are rapidly depleted in early SIV infection and
also why no profound changes in the percentage or number of
CD4+ T cells are detected in the peripheral lymphoid
tissues during acute infection.
In addition, selective targeting of CCR5-expressing cells in the
intestine was shown by examining DP cells in the intestine before and
after SIV infection. DP T cells (which disappear even more rapidly than
SP CD4+ T cells) were shown to be virtually all CCR5
positive before infection, and these cells were selectively and
essentially eliminated by 14 days p.i. If intestinal CD4+ T
cells were randomly eliminated after SIV infection, then an equal
proportion of the DP cells would be expected to be eliminated. This
demonstrates that selective elimination of CCR5-expressing CD4+ effector T cells occurs in lymphoid tissues in the
first few days of SIV infection.
Unfortunately, these data do not fully explain the disappearance of
intestinal CD4+ T cells that did not (at least initially)
express CCR5, as demonstrated in Fig. 3. However, this is likely a
reflection of the dynamic processes that are occurring within the
intestinal immune system during acute SIV infection. For example, the
CD4+ T cells that were initially CCR5 negative may have
upregulated CCR5 expression due to immune activation associated with
SIV infection, thus becoming susceptible targets for viral infection
and lysis. Alternatively, these cells may have been eliminated through
other nonlytic mechanisms, such as "bystander apoptosis"
(6). Additional studies are needed to definitively determine
the mechanisms and dynamics of the intestinal CD4+ T-cell
depletion. However, the loss of CCR5-expressing cells in the peripheral
tissues in both early and later stages of SIV infection is clearly
evident from this study, indicating that selective loss of
CCR5-expressing CD4+ T cells is occurring in SIVmac251 infection.
Combined, these data show that early SIV infection is associated with
selective depletion of effector CD4+ T cells expressing
CCR5. The speed of the intestinal CD4+ T-cell depletion and
the estimated magnitude of viral production in HIV-infected individuals
(9) are in marked contrast to the designation of HIV and SIV
as "lenti," or "slow," viruses. If we consider the possibility
that these viruses only lytically replicate within highly specified
target cells (such as CD4+ CCR5+
CD45RO+ lymphocytes), then the pathogenesis of SIV and HIV
infection begins to appear more similar to that of other viral
infections. However, the major difference appears to be the unique
ability of SIV and HIV to specifically eliminate effector
CD4+ T cells within the first few days or weeks of
infection. This almost certainly cripples the initiation of an
effective immune response to the virus. Moreover, it appears that as
new effector CD4+ T cells are generated, they continue to
be eliminated, preventing the development of an effective immune response.
Since this study involved SIVmac251, a virus which utilizes CCR5 (and
not CXCR4) for cellular entry, this provided an invaluable model for
demonstrating the effects of a virus that utilizes a specific chemokine
receptor in an in vivo model of infection. Whether these findings can
be reproduced in HIV-infected humans is uncertain, since samples from
infected patients are rarely obtained within the first few days of
exposure, and they may harbor numerous viral strains, particularly in
the latter stages of infection, which may or may not have similar
patterns of chemokine receptor utilization. However, studies of human
lymphoid tissue have shown that CXCR4 utilization is sufficient to
deplete lymph node and peripheral blood CD4+ T cells in
vitro (18). Other studies have shown that CCR5-utilizing (R5) strains of HIV deplete CCR5-expressing PBMCs in vitro; however (as
shown here in the SIV model), this depletion does not substantially change PBMC numbers, because very few human PBMCs express CCR5 (7). Other studies have suggested that the rapid decline in CD4+ T-cell counts and the progression to AIDS are
associated with a switch from CCR5-tropic to CXCR4-tropic variants of
HIV (21). Combined, these studies strongly support the
hypothesis that chemokine receptor usage determines the speed and
course of HIV infection.
The presence of very large numbers of effector CD4+ T cells
expressing CCR5 in mucosal surfaces helps explain why SIV and HIV are
readily transmitted across mucosal surfaces and why most primary infections are with R5 viruses. Moreover, the abundance of lymphocytes, macrophages, and dendritic cells in the gastrointestinal tract, combined with its sheer size, makes the gut a very large reservoir for
viral persistence in both a latent form and (as effector
CD4+ T cells attempt to replenish the intestine) a
continual source of active viral replication.
Finally, since CCR5-utilizing strains of HIV appear to be the
predominant virus transmitted in new infections, these findings may be
of major importance in designing vaccines and therapeutic strategies to
combat HIV infection. Perhaps vaccines may be designed that selectively
block CCR5-mediated attachment and entry of virus into these target
cells, which could conceivably allow effector CD4+ T cells
to survive long enough to mount an effective immune response against HIV.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Michael O'Connell for study coordination, Kristen
Toohey for graphical support, and Elaine Roberts and Pam Wooten for
technical assistance and animal care.
This work was supported in part by NIH grants DK50550, RR00168,
HD36310, and HL59787 and by Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation
grant PG-50861. A. A. Lackner is the recipient of an Elizabeth
Glaser Scientist Award.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Present address: Tulane Regional
Primate Research Center, 18703 Three Rivers Rd., Covington, LA 70433. Phone: (504) 871-6228. Fax: (504) 893-1352. E-mail:
veazey{at}tpc.tulane.edu.
 |
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Journal of Virology, December 2000, p. 11001-11007, Vol. 74, No. 23
0022-538X/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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