HIV-1 Balances the Fitness Costs and Benefits of Disrupting the Host Cell Actin Cytoskeleton Early after Mucosal Transmission

HIV-1在黏膜传播早期破坏宿主细胞肌动蛋白细胞骨架的适应性成本和收益之间取得平衡

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作者:Shariq M Usmani ,Thomas T Murooka ,Maud Deruaz ,Wan Hon Koh ,Radwa R Sharaf ,Mauro Di Pilato ,Karen A Power ,Paul Lopez ,Ryan Hnatiuk ,Vladimir D Vrbanac ,Andrew M Tager ,Todd M Allen ,Andrew D Luster ,Thorsten R Mempel

Abstract

HIV-1 primarily infects T lymphocytes and uses these motile cells as migratory vehicles for effective dissemination in the host. Paradoxically, the virus at the same time disrupts multiple cellular processes underlying lymphocyte motility, seemingly counterproductive to rapid systemic infection. Here we show by intravital microscopy in humanized mice that perturbation of the actin cytoskeleton via the lentiviral protein Nef, and not changes to chemokine receptor expression or function, is the dominant cause of dysregulated infected T cell motility in lymphoid tissue by preventing stable cellular polarization required for fast migration. Accordingly, disrupting the Nef hydrophobic patch that facilitates actin cytoskeletal perturbation initially accelerates systemic viral dissemination after female genital transmission. However, the same feature of Nef was subsequently critical for viral persistence in immune-competent hosts. Therefore, a highly conserved activity of lentiviral Nef proteins has dual effects and imposes both fitness costs and benefits on the virus at different stages of infection.

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