|
||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
J. Exp. Med.,
Volume 187, Number 3, February 2, 1998 403-413
By




From the * Laboratory of Virology and Although apoptosis is considered one of the major mechanisms of CD4+ T cell depletion in
HIV-infected patients, the virus-infected cells somehow appear to be protected from apoptosis,
which generally occurs in bystander cells. Vpr is an auxiliary HIV-1 protein, which, unlike the
other regulatory gene products, is present at high copy number in virus particles. We established stable transfectants of CD4+ T Jurkat cells constitutively expressing low levels of vpr.
These clones exhibited cell cycle characteristics similar to those of control-transfected cells.
Treatment of control clones with apoptotic stimuli (i.e., cycloheximide/tumor necrosis factor
Ultrastructures, Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Viale Regina
Elena, 299-00161 Rome, Italy; and § Shionogi Institute for Medical Science, Mishima Settsu-shi,
Osaka 566, Japan
(TNF-
), anti-Fas antibody, or serum starvation) resulted in a massive cell death by apoptosis. In contrast, all the vpr-expressing clones showed an impressive protection from apoptosis
independently of the inducer. Notably, vpr antisense phosphorothioate oligodeoxynucleotides render vpr-expressing cells as susceptible to apoptosis induced by cycloheximide and TNF-
as
the control clones. Moreover, the constitutive expression of HIV-1 vpr resulted in the upregulation of bcl-2, an oncogene endowed with antiapoptotic activities, and in the downmodulation of bax, a proapoptotic factor of the bcl-2 family. Altogether, these results suggest that low
levels of the endogenous vpr protein can interfere with the physiological turnover of T lymphocytes at early stages of virus infection, thus facilitating HIV persistence and, subsequently,
viral spread. This might explain why apoptosis mostly occurs in bystander uninfected cells in
AIDS patients.
This article has been cited by other articles:
| TABLE OF CONTENTS |
|