Species-specific host factors rather than virus-intrinsic virulence determine primate lentiviral pathogenicity

物种特异性宿主因素而非病毒内在毒力决定灵长类慢病毒的致病性

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作者:Simone Joas, Erica H Parrish, Clement W Gnanadurai, Edina Lump, Christina M Stürzel, Nicholas F Parrish, Gerald H Learn, Ulrike Sauermann, Berit Neumann, Kerstin Mätz Rensing, Dietmar Fuchs, James M Billingsley, Steven E Bosinger, Guido Silvestri, Cristian Apetrei, Nicolas Huot, Thalia Garcia-Tellez

Abstract

HIV-1 causes chronic inflammation and AIDS in humans, whereas related simian immunodeficiency viruses (SIVs) replicate efficiently in their natural hosts without causing disease. It is currently unknown to what extent virus-specific properties are responsible for these different clinical outcomes. Here, we incorporate two putative HIV-1 virulence determinants, i.e., a Vpu protein that antagonizes tetherin and blocks NF-κB activation and a Nef protein that fails to suppress T cell activation via downmodulation of CD3, into a non-pathogenic SIVagm strain and test their impact on viral replication and pathogenicity in African green monkeys. Despite sustained high-level viremia over more than 4 years, moderately increased immune activation and transcriptional signatures of inflammation, the HIV-1-like SIVagm does not cause immunodeficiency or any other disease. These data indicate that species-specific host factors rather than intrinsic viral virulence factors determine the pathogenicity of primate lentiviruses.

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