20 KDa homologous restriction factor of complement resembles T cell activating protein

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ABSTRACT Human immunodeficiency virus type 2 (HIV-2) infection results in a milder course of disease and slower progression to AIDS than does HIV-1. We hypothesized that this difference may be due to degradation of the sterile alpha motif and HD domain 1 (SAMHD1) host restriction factor by the HIV-2 Vpx gene product, thereby diminishing abortive infection and pyroptotic cell death within bystander CD4 T cells. We have compared CD4 T cell death in tonsil-derived human lymphoid aggregate cultures (HLACs) infected with wild-type HIV-2, HIV-2 ΔVpx, or HIV-1. In contrast to our hypothesis, HIV-2, HIV-2 ΔVpx, and HIV-1 induced similar levels of bystander CD4 T cell death. In all cases, cell death was blocked by AMD3100, a CXCR4 entry inhibitor, but not by raltegravir, an integrase, indicating that only early life cycle events were required. Cell death was also blocked by a caspase-1 inhibitor, a key enzyme promoting pyroptosis, but not by a caspase-3 inhibitor, an important enzyme in apoptosis. HIV-1-induced abortive infection and pyroptotic cell death were also not reduced by forced encapsidation of HIV-2 Vpx into HIV-1 virions. Together, these findings indicate that HIV-2 and HIV-1 support similar levels of CD4 T cell depletion in vitro despite HIV-2 Vpx-mediated degradation of the SAMHD1 transcription factor. The milder disease course observed with HIV-2 infection likely stems from factors other than abortive infection and caspase-1-dependent pyroptosis in bystander CD4 T cells. IMPORTANCE CD4 T cell depletion during HIV-1 infection involves the demise of bystander CD4 T cells due to abortive infection, viral DNA sensing, inflammasome assembly, and death by caspase-1-dependent pyroptosis. HIV-2 infection is associated with milder disease and lower rates of CD4 T cell loss. We hypothesized that HIV-2 infection produces lower levels of pyroptosis due to the action of its Vpx gene product. Vpx degrades the SAMHD1 restriction factor, potentially reducing abortive forms of infection. However, in tonsil cell cultures, HIV-2, HIV-2 ΔVpx, and HIV-1 induced indistinguishable levels of pyroptosis. Forced encapsidation of Vpx into HIV-1 virions also did not reduce pyroptosis. Thus, SAMHD1 does not appear to play a key role in the induction of bystander cell pyroptosis. Additionally, the milder clinical course of HIV-2-induced disease is apparently not explained by a decrease in this inflammatory form of programmed cell death.


Author(s):  
H. Alasam

The possibility that intrathymic T-cell differentiation involves stem cell-lymphoid interactions in embryos led us to study the ultrastructure of epithelial cell in normal embryonic thymus. Studies in adult thymus showed that it produces several peptides that induce T-cell differentiation. Several of them have been chemically characterized, such as thymosin α 1, thymopoietin, thymic humoral factor or the serum thymic factor. It was suggested that most of these factors are secreted by populations of A and B-epithelial cells.Embryonic materials were obtained from inbred matings of Swiss Albino mice. Thymuses were disected from embryos 17 days old and prepared for transmission electron microscopy. Our studies showed that embryonic thymus at this stage contains undifferentiated and differentiated epithelial cells, large lymphoblasts, medium and few small lymphocytes (Fig. 5). No differences were found between cortical and medullary epithelial cells, in contrast to the findings of Van Vliet et al,. Epithelial cells were mostly of the A-type with low electron density in both cytoplasm and nucleus. However few B-type with high electron density were also found (Fig. 7).


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