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Journal of Virology, September 2001, p. 8090-8095, Vol. 75, No. 17
Institut für Medizinische Mikrobiologie
und Hygiene, Universitätsklinikum Mannheim,
Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg, Mannheim,
Germany,1 and INSERM U74, Institut de
Virologie, Université Louis Pasteur, Strasbourg,
France2
Received 29 January 2001/Accepted 29 May 2001
Intravenous infection of cats with feline immunodeficiency virus
was used as a model system to study activation of virus replication in
brain-resident microglial cells in vitro. Virus release by ramified
microglial cells isolated from subclinically infected animals was
detectable in cell-free tissue culture supernatant only by reverse
transcription and nested PCR of gag-specific RNA sequences
and not by virion-associated reverse transcriptase activity. In
contrast, cocultivation of in vivo-infected microglial cells with
mitogen-activated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) regularly
allows detection of high virus yields in cell-free tissue culture
fluid. Besides uptake and multiplication of microglia-derived virus in
PBMC, release of virus from microglia is stimulated by cell contact
with PBMC. The data suggest that T lymphocytes patrolling the central
nervous system could reactivate the semilatent state of lentiviruses in
microglial cells in the course of clinically silent central nervous
system infection.
0022-538X/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.75.17.8090-8095.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
In Vitro Activation of Feline Immunodeficiency
Virus in Ramified Microglial Cells from Asymptomatically Infected
Cats
*
Corresponding author: Mailing address: Institut
für Medizinische Mikrobiologie und Hygiene,
Universitätsklinikum Mannheim, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg,
Theodor-Kutzer-Ufer 1-3, 68167 Mannheim, Germany. Phone: 49 (0) 621 383 4063. Fax: 49 (0) 621 383 2010. E-mail:
andreas.hein{at}imh.ma.uni-heidelberg.de.
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