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Carbohydrate-binding Agents Inhibit HIV-1 Infection of Human Primary Monocyte-derived Macrophages and Prevent MDM-directed Viral Capture and Subsequent Transmission to CD4+ T Lymphocytes
Michela Pollicita*1, D Schols2, S Aquaro3, W Peumans4, E Van Damme4, C Perno1, and J Balzarini2
1Univ of Tor Vergata, Rome, Italy; 2Rega Inst for Med Res, KULeuven, Belgium; 3Univ of Calabria, Rende, Italy; and 4Ghent Univ, Belgium
Background: Carbohydrate-binding
agents represent innovative anti-HIV compounds selectively targeting the
glycans of the HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein gp120 and preventing
DC-SIGN-directed HIV capture by dendritic cells (DC) and transmission to CD4+
T lymphocytes. We wanted to investigate the ability of carbohydrate-binding
agents to inhibit HIV-1 capture by human primary monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM)
and to inhibit the subsequent virus transmission from HIV-1-captured MDM to CD4+
T lymphocytes.
Methods: HIV-1
capture was assessed by p24 antigen enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA),
in MDM infected by several HIV-1 strains and exposed to
various doses of mannose-specific (plant lectins: HHA, GNA,
NPA, and CA; procaryotic cyanovirin-N [CV-N]), or GlcNAc-specific (plant lectin
UDA) carbohydrate-binding agents. HIV-1 transmission between MDM
infected with carbohydrate-binding agents-exposed HIV-1 and CD4+ T lymphocyte
cell line (C8166) was analyzed by p24 antigen production and by syncytia formation.
Virus production was analyzed in MDM at day 14 after carbohydrate-binding
agents-exposed R5 HIV-1 infection. MDM were pre-incubated with different antibodies
against macrophage mannose receptor (MMR), DC-SIGN, and CD4, or with mannan and
than analyzed for both HIV-1 capture and virus transmission to C8166 cells by
measuring p24 antigen. The experiments were carried out in triplicate and the
results are presented as mean values with standard deviation.
Results: We
demonstrated that the carbohydrate-binding agents efficiently prevent R5 HIV-1
infection of MDM in the nanomolar range with a dose-dependent effect. The revealed
values of EC50 were 0.04, 0.038, 0.026, 0.01, 0.207, 0.0005, 3.8 µM,
for HHA, GNA, NPA, CA, UDA, CV-N, PRM-A, respectively. The same order of
magnitude was observed in C8166. Interestingly, both R5 and X4 HIV-1 strains
were efficiently captured by MMR-expressing MDM. HIV-1 capture by MDM was dose-dependently
inhibited by short pre-exposure of X4 HIV-1 to carbohydrate-binding agents, by MMR
antibody (99% of capture inhibition ±SD 0.01, compared to control), and by the
mannan (55% of capture inhibition ±SD 0.2, compared to control). Short
pre-exposure of X4 HIV-1 to carbohydrate-binding agents also dose-dependently prevented
virus transmission and subsequent syncytia formation in co-cultures of the carbohydrate-binding
agent-exposed HIV-1-captured MDM and uninfected C8166.
Conclusions:
The potential of carbohydrate-binding agents to impair MDM in their capacity
to capture and to transmit HIV to CD4+ T lymphocytes might be an
important property to be taken into consideration in the eventual choice to
select microbicide candidate drugs for clinical investigation.
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