HIV-1 and HIV-2 interaction results in reduced cell infectivity and viral replication in vitro
Edwin Magomere, Mark Appeaning, Nana-Ama Amoako, Alberta Serwaa, Kirk Kouffie, Enoch Matey Langmer, Samuel Effah, Thibault Mesplede, George B. Kyei, Thumbi Ndung’u, Peter Kojo Quashie

TL;DR
This study shows that when HIV-1 and HIV-2 infect cells together, HIV-1 infectivity and replication are reduced in laboratory experiments.
Contribution
The study experimentally demonstrates that HIV-2 inhibits HIV-1 infectivity and replication in vitro across multiple subtypes.
Findings
Dual infection with HIV-2 significantly reduced HIV-1 infectivity and replication in cell culture.
HIV-1 transcription and splicing were reduced in the presence of HIV-2, leading to lower viral loads.
Subtype-specific variations were observed, but overall infectivity was consistently lower in dual infections.
Abstract
During dual infection, HIV-1 and HIV-2 may infect the same cell, either simultaneously or sequentially. When these closely related lentiviruses co-infect, HIV-2 has been found to inhibit HIV-1 replication in vitro. In-patient infection data suggests that dual infection attenuates disease progression. Mechanisms underlying this inhibition have not been fully elucidated. Here, we assessed HIV-1 infectivity in presence or absence of HIV-2 in cell culture. HIV-1 subtypes A, B, C, and CRF02_AG were used to infect TZM-bl reporter cells as single infections or as dual infections with HIV-2. Infectious titer concentrations were determined by cytopathic effect-based method (TCID50) and P24 ELISA was used to determine p24 concentration in supernatant. Infectivity was determined using luminescence assay, while qPCR was used to determine expression of cell-associated unspliced and multiply spliced…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHIV Research and Treatment · HIV/AIDS drug development and treatment · HIV-related health complications and treatments
