Study of long-term cultures of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIVmac 251)-infected peripheral blood lymphocytes.

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TítuloStudy of long-term cultures of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIVmac 251)-infected peripheral blood lymphocytes.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1990
AutoresMontaner, LJ, Ringler, DJ, Wyand, MS, Mattmuller, MR, MacKey, JJ, Schmidt, DK, Daniel, MD, King, NW
JournalLab Invest
Volume63
Issue2
Pagination242-7
Date Published1990 Aug
ISSN0023-6837
Palabras claveAnimals, Antigens, Differentiation, T-Lymphocyte, Cells, Cultured, Immunohistochemistry, Lymphocytes, Macaca mulatta, Microscopy, Electron, Nucleic Acid Hybridization, RNA, Messenger, RNA-Directed DNA Polymerase, Simian immunodeficiency virus, Time Factors, Viral Core Proteins, Virus Replication
Abstract

A culture of rhesus monkey peripheral blood lymphocytes was divided into two parts; one was kept as an uninfected control, and the other was infected with a strain of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIVmac251) originally isolated from a rhesus monkey that died of a malignant lymphoma associated with acquired immune deficiency syndrome. Both cultures were sampled at successive intervals from 1 to 40 days postinfection. Each sample was subjected to in situ hybridization for detection of viral mRNA, immunocytochemical detection of viral core protein (p27), reverse transcriptase assay, electron microscopy, and immunophenotypic characterization of infected cells. These techniques were used to define viral growth kinetics of this novel lentivirus in peripheral blood lymphocytes. The first evidence of SIVmac251 replication was obtained by an in situ hybridization signal for viral mRNA at 2 days postinoculation. This was followed by detection of viral p27 core protein by immunocytochemistry on day 4. Reverse transcriptase activity above control values was not detected until day 8. Budding particles were not found in the infected cultures until 14 days postinfection. Results of in situ hybridization, immunocytochemistry, and reverse transcriptase assay indicated that two bursts of viral replication occurred during the course of this study. The first, at 3 weeks postinfection, was due to infection and subsequent depletion of CD4+ lymphocytes, while the second, 3 weeks later, resulted from a cycle of replication in CD8+ lymphocytes and the remaining CD4+ cells, culminating in the death of all cells on day 39 postinoculation.

Alternate JournalLab. Invest.
PubMed ID1696333
Grant ListRR00168 / RR / NCRR NIH HHS / United States