Login / Signup

Productive HIV-1 infection of tissue macrophages by fusion with infected CD4+ T cells.

Rémi MascarauMarie WoottumLéa FromontRémi GenceVincent Cantaloube-FerrieuZoï VahlasKevin LévêqueFlorent BertrandThomas BeunonArnaud MétaisHicham El CostaNabila Jabrane-FerratYohan GalloisNicolas GuibertJean-Luc DavignonGilles FavreIsabelle Maridonneau-PariniRenaud PoinclouxBernard LaganeSerge BénichouBrigitte Raynaud-MessinaChristel Verollet
Published in: The Journal of cell biology (2023)
Macrophages are essential for HIV-1 pathogenesis and represent major viral reservoirs. Therefore, it is critical to understand macrophage infection, especially in tissue macrophages, which are widely infected in vivo, but poorly permissive to cell-free infection. Although cell-to-cell transmission of HIV-1 is a determinant mode of macrophage infection in vivo, how HIV-1 transfers toward macrophages remains elusive. Here, we demonstrate that fusion of infected CD4+ T lymphocytes with human macrophages leads to their efficient and productive infection. Importantly, several tissue macrophage populations undergo this heterotypic cell fusion, including synovial, placental, lung alveolar, and tonsil macrophages. We also find that this mode of infection is modulated by the macrophage polarization state. This fusion process engages a specific short-lived adhesion structure and is controlled by the CD81 tetraspanin, which activates RhoA/ROCK-dependent actomyosin contractility in macrophages. Our study provides important insights into the mechanisms underlying infection of tissue-resident macrophages, and establishment of persistent cellular reservoirs in patients.
Keyphrases