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Retroviral Interference on STAT Activation in Individuals Coinfected with Human T Cell Leukemia Virus Type 2 and HIV-1
Author(s) -
Chiara Bovolenta,
Elisabetta Pilotti,
Massimiliano Mauri,
Barbara Panzeri,
Monica Sassi,
Pierpaolo Dall’Aglio,
Umberto Bertazzoni,
Guido Poli,
Claudio Casoli
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.169.8.4443
Subject(s) - coinfection , virology , retrovirus , biology , t cell leukemia , leukemia , stat5 , human t lymphotropic virus , peripheral blood mononuclear cell , secretion , stat1 , immunology , human t lymphotropic virus 1 , in vivo , ex vivo , t cell , virus , cell culture , in vitro , interferon , immune system , genetics , biochemistry , neuroscience , myelopathy , spinal cord
Human T cell leukemia virus (HTLV) type-2 is a human retrovirus whose infection has not been tightly linked to human diseases. However, the fairly high prevalence of this infection among HIV-1-positive individuals indicates the importance of better understanding the potential interference of HTLV-2 infection on HIV-1 infection and AIDS. We previously demonstrated that one signature of PBMC freshly derived from HIV-1-infected individuals is the constitutive activation of a C-terminal truncated STAT5 (STAT5Delta). Therefore, we analyzed the potential activation of STATs in HTLV-2 monoinfected and HTLV-2/HIV-1 dually infected individuals. We observed that PBMC of HTLV-2-infected individuals do not show STAT activation unless they are cultivated ex vivo, in the absence of any mitogenic stimuli, for at least 8 h. The emergence of STAT activation, namely of STAT1, in culture was mostly related to the secretion of IFN-gamma. Of note, this phenomenon is not only a characteristic feature of HTLV-2-infected individuals but also occurred with PBMC of HIV-1(+) individuals. Surprisingly, HTLV-2/HIV-1 coinfection resulted in low/absent STAT activation in vivo that paralleled a diminished secretion of IFN-gamma after ex vivo cultivation. Our findings indicate that both HTLV-2 and HIV-1 infection prime T lymphocytes for STAT1 activation, but they also highlight an interference exerted by HTLV-2 on HIV-1-induced STAT1 activation. Although the nature of such a phenomenon is unclear at the present, these findings support the hypothesis that HTLV-2 may interfere with HIV-1 infection at multiple levels.

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