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

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.

Department

Description

Provenance

Subjects

Animals, Humans, Lentiviruses, Primate, HIV-1, NF-kappa B, Viral Load, Sequence Alignment, Lymphocyte Activation, Virus Replication, Virulence, Signal Transduction, Transcription, Genetic, Gene Expression Regulation, Amino Acid Sequence, Female, Simian immunodeficiency virus, Human Immunodeficiency Virus Proteins, nef Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus, Viral Regulatory and Accessory Proteins, Host Specificity, Bone Marrow Stromal Antigen 2, CD3 Complex, Chlorocebus aethiops

Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1038/s41467-018-03762-3

Publication Info

Joas, Simone, Erica H Parrish, Clement W Gnanadurai, Edina Lump, Christina M Stürzel, Nicholas F Parrish, Gerald H Learn, Ulrike Sauermann, et al. (2018). Species-specific host factors rather than virus-intrinsic virulence determine primate lentiviral pathogenicity. Nature communications, 9(1). p. 1371. 10.1038/s41467-018-03762-3 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/31281.

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Scholars@Duke

Parrish

Nicholas Fredric Parrish

Medical Instructor in the Department of Surgery

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