Article
- The EMBO Journal (2005) 24, 2481 - 2489
- doi:10.1038/sj.emboj.7600707
Published online: 26 May 2005
Subject Category:
Macrophages archive HIV-1 virions for dissemination in trans
Natalia Sharova1, Catherine Swingler1, Mark Sharkey1 and Mario Stevenson1
- Program in Molecular Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA, USA
Correspondence to:
Mario Stevenson, Program in Molecular Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Two Biotech, Suite 319, 373 Plantation Street, Worcester, MA 01605, USA. Tel.: +1 508 856 3645; Fax: +1 508 856 4075; E-mail: Mario.Stevenson@umassmed.edu
Received 31 January 2005; Accepted 12 May 2005
Abstract
Viruses have evolved various strategies in order to persist within the host. To date, most information on mechanisms of HIV-1 persistence has been derived from studies with lymphocytes, but there is little information regarding mechanisms that govern HIV-1 persistence in macrophages. It has previously been demonstrated that virus assembly in macrophages occurs in cytoplasmic vesicles, which exhibit the characteristics of multivesicular bodies or late endosomes. The infectious stability of virions that assemble intracellularly in macrophages has not been evaluated. We demonstrate that virions assembling intracellularly in primary macrophages retain infectivity for extended intervals. Infectious virus was recovered directly from cytoplasmic lysates of macrophages and could be transmitted from macrophages to peripheral blood lymphocytes in trans 6 weeks after ongoing viral replication was blocked. Cell-associated virus decayed significantly from 1 to 2 weeks post infection, but decreased minimally thereafter. The persistence of intracellular virions did not require the viral accessory proteins Vpu or Nef. The stable sequestration of infectious virions within cytoplasmic compartments of macrophages may represent an additional mechanism for viral persistence in HIV-1-infected individuals.
Keywords:
- cytoplasmic virions,
- HIV-1,
- macrophages,
- viral persistence



