Proteasome-independent degradation of HIV-1 in naturally non-permissive human placental trophoblast cells

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The human placenta-derived cell line BeWo has been demonstrated to be restrictive to cell-free HIV-1 infection. BeWo cells are however permissive to infection by VSV-G pseudotyped HIV-1, which enters cells by a receptor-independent m...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Barré-Sinoussi Françoise, Cannou Claude, Ross Anna Laura, Menu Elisabeth
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2009-05-01
Series:Retrovirology
Online Access:http://www.retrovirology.com/content/6/1/46
Description
Summary:<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The human placenta-derived cell line BeWo has been demonstrated to be restrictive to cell-free HIV-1 infection. BeWo cells are however permissive to infection by VSV-G pseudotyped HIV-1, which enters cells by a receptor-independent mechanism, and to infection by HIV-1 via a cell-to-cell route.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Here we analysed viral entry in wild type BeWo (CCR5<sup>+</sup>, CXCR4<sup>+</sup>) and BeWo-CD4<sup>+ </sup>(CD4<sup>+</sup>, CCR5<sup>+</sup>, CXCR4<sup>+</sup>) cells. We report that HIV-1 internalisation is not restricted in either cell line. Levels of internalised p24 antigen between VSV-G HIV-1 pseudotypes and R5 or X4 virions were comparable. We next analysed the fate of internalised virions; X4 and R5 HIV-1 virions were less stable over time in BeWo cells than VSV-G HIV-1 pseudotypes. We then investigated the role of the proteasome in restricting cell-free HIV-1 infection in BeWo cells using proteasome inhibitors. We observed an increase in the levels of VSV-G pseudotyped HIV-1 infection in proteasome-inhibitor treated cells, but the infection by R5-Env or X4-Env pseudotyped virions remains restricted.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Collectively these results suggest that cell-free HIV-1 infection encounters a surface block leading to a non-productive entry route, which either actively targets incoming virions for non-proteasomal degradation, and impedes their release into the cytoplasm, or causes the inactivation of mechanisms essential for viral replication.</p>
ISSN:1742-4690