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NK cells and monocytes modulate primary HTLV-1 infection
Author(s) -
Ramona Moles,
Sarkis Sarkis,
Veronica Galli,
Maria Omsland,
Maria Artesi,
Massimiliano Bissa,
Katherine McKin,
Sophia Brown,
Vincent Hahaut,
Robyn Washington-Parks,
Joshua A. Welsh,
David Venzon,
Anna Gutowska,
Melvin N. Doster,
Matthew W. Breed,
Kristin E. Killoran,
Joshua Kramer,
Jennifer C. Jones,
Marcin Moniuszko,
Anne Van den Broeke,
Cynthia A. Pise-Masison,
Genoveffa Franchini
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
plos pathogens
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.719
H-Index - 206
eISSN - 1553-7374
pISSN - 1553-7366
DOI - 10.1371/journal.ppat.1010416
Subject(s) - cytotoxic t cell , biology , virology , nk 92 , cd8 , monocyte , interleukin 21 , virus , immunology , immune system , in vitro , biochemistry
We investigated the impact of monocytes, NK cells, and CD8 + T-cells in primary HTLV-1 infection by depleting cell subsets and exposing macaques to either HTLV-1 wild type (HTLV-1 WT ) or to the HTLV-1 p12KO mutant unable to infect replete animals due to a single point mutation in orf-I that inhibits its expression. The orf- I encoded p8/p12 proteins counteract cytotoxic NK and CD8 + T-cells and favor viral DNA persistence in monocytes. Double NK and CD8 + T-cells or CD8 depletion alone accelerated seroconversion in all animals exposed to HTLV-1 WT . In contrast, HTLV-1 p12KO infectivity was fully restored only when NK cells were also depleted, demonstrating a critical role of NK cells in primary infection. Monocyte/macrophage depletion resulted in accelerated seroconversion in all animals exposed to HTLV-1 WT , but antibody titers to the virus were low and not sustained. Seroconversion did not occur in most animals exposed to HTLV-1 p12KO. In vitro experiments in human primary monocytes or THP-1 cells comparing HTLV-1 WT and HTLV-1 p12KO demonstrated that orf-I expression is associated with inhibition of inflammasome activation in primary cells, with increased CD47 “don’t-eat-me” signal surface expression in virus infected cells and decreased monocyte engulfment of infected cells. Collectively, our data demonstrate a critical role for innate NK cells in primary infection and suggest a dual role of monocytes in primary infection. On one hand, orf-I expression increases the chances of viral transmission by sparing infected cells from efferocytosis, and on the other may protect the engulfed infected cells by modulating inflammasome activation. These data also suggest that, once infection is established, the stoichiometry of orf-I expression may contribute to the chronic inflammation observed in HTLV-1 infection by modulating monocyte efferocytosis.

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