In vivo HIV-1 nuclear condensates safeguard against cGAS and license reverse transcription

体内HIV-1核凝聚物可抵御cGAS感染并促进逆转录

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作者:Selen Ay # ,Julien Burlaud-Gaillard # ,Anastasia Gazi # ,Yevgeniy Tatirovsky ,Celine Cuche ,Jean-Sebastien Diana ,Viviana Scoca ,James P Di Santo ,Philippe Roingeard ,Fabrizio Mammano ,Francesca Di Nunzio

Abstract

Entry of viral capsids into the nucleus induces the formation of biomolecular condensates called HIV-1 membraneless organelles (HIV-1-MLOs). Several questions remain about their persistence, in vivo formation, composition, and function. Our study reveals that HIV-1-MLOs persisted for several weeks in infected cells, and their abundance correlated with viral infectivity. Using an appropriate animal model, we show that HIV-1-MLOs were formed in vivo during acute infection. To explore the viral structures present within these biomolecular condensates, we used a combination of double immunogold labeling, electron microscopy and tomography, and unveiled a diverse array of viral core structures. Our functional analyses showed that HIV-1-MLOs remained stable during treatment with a reverse transcriptase inhibitor, maintaining the virus in a dormant state. Drug withdrawal restored reverse transcription, promoting efficient virus replication akin to that observed in latently infected patients on antiretroviral therapy. However, when HIV-1 MLOs were deliberately disassembled by pharmacological treatment, we observed a complete loss of viral infectivity. Our findings show that HIV-1 MLOs shield the final reverse transcription product from host immune detection.

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