By
From * PRESTO, Japan Science and Technology Corporation, and Tsukuba Life Science Center, The
Institute of Physical and Chemical Research (RIKEN), Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305, Japan; the Institute
of Molecular Embryology and Genetics, Kumamoto University School of Medicine, Kumamoto 862, Japan; the § Division of Radiation Health, National Institute of Radiological Sciences, Inage-ku,
Chiba 263, Japan; and the
Department of Immunology, Institute of Basic Medical Sciences and
Center for Tsukuba Advanced Research Alliance, Tsukuba University, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305, Japan
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Abstract |
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T cell line-tropic (T-tropic) HIV type 1 strains enter cells by interacting with the cell-surface molecules CD4 and CXCR4. We have generated transgenic mice predominantly expressing human CD4 and CXCR4 on their CD4-positive T lymphocytes (CD4+ T cells). Their primary thymocytes are susceptible to T-tropic but not to macrophage-tropic HIV-1 infection in vitro, albeit with a viral antigen production less efficient than human peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Interestingly, even without HIV infection, transgenic mice display a CD4+ T cell depletion profile of peripheral blood reminiscent of that seen in AIDS patients. We demonstrate that CD4+ T cell trafficking in transgenic mice is biased toward bone marrow essentially due to CXCR4 overexpression, resulting in the severe loss of CD4+ T cells from circulating blood. Our data suggest that CXCR4 plays an important role in lymphocyte trafficking through tissues, especially between peripheral blood and bone marrow, participating in the regulation of lymphocyte homeostasis in these compartments. Based on these findings, we propose a hypothetical model in which the dual function of CXCR4 in HIV-1 infection and in lymphocyte trafficking may cooperatively induce progressive HIV-1 infection and CD4+ T cell decline in patients.
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Introduction |
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Human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) has been broadly categorized into three groups: macrophage-tropic (M-tropic)1 nonsyncytium-inducing, T cell line- tropic (T-tropic) syncytium-inducing, and dual tropic mixed phenotypes (1). Primary isolates from early asymptomatic HIV-1 infection are frequently M-tropic, suggesting that M-tropic HIV-1 strains play a critical role in establishing infection (1). During the clinical course, T-tropic strains emerge at a later stage associated with a decline in CD4 positive T lymphocytes (CD4+ T cells), suggesting that these strains may be related to AIDS pathogenesis (1).
To enter cells, M- and T-tropic strains use distinct G
protein-coupled seven-transmembrane chemokine receptors in addition to their common receptor, human CD4
(4). M-tropic strains use receptors for CC-chemokines,
including RANTES (regulated on activation, normal T cell
expressed and secreted), macrophage inflammatory protein
(MIP)-1, and MIP-1
(7, 8), or other chemokine receptor-like orphan receptors (9, 10). T-tropic strains, in contrast, mainly use CXCR4 (11, 12), the receptor for CXC-chemokine stromal cell-derived factor 1 (SDF-1) (13, 14).
These chemokines function as chemotactic factors for hematopoietic lineage cells, including granulocytes, monocytes, lymphocytes, and their progenitor cells (7, 8, 15). It
has been suggested that these chemokines play roles in the
migration of these cells to local inflammation sites and in
their homing to distant organs during development. The
function and regulation of expression of these chemokine
receptors may underlie the mechanisms of HIV transmission, latency, and immunodeficiency.
Although these chemokine receptors have been shown to facilitate HIV entry into cell lines, it remains unknown whether they are able to render mouse primary lymphocytes susceptible to HIV infection. Transgenic mice whose CD4+ T cells have HIV infectability are expected to prove useful as a small-animal model for developing therapeutic reagents against HIV infection and for understanding the basis of AIDS pathogenesis. Here we report the generation of transgenic mice that predominantly express human CD4 and CXCR4 on their CD4+ T cells and CD4+ thymocytes. Thymocytes from transgenic mice were found to be susceptible to T- but not M-tropic HIV-1 infection in vitro. Interestingly, the tissue distribution of CD4+ T cells in these mice was deregulated with the severe loss of CD4+ T cells from peripheral blood coinciding with their accumulation in bone marrow, and this was shown to be essentially a result of CXCR4 overexpression. Our data suggest that CXCR4 plays an important role both in the regulation of lymphocyte trafficking and in T-tropic HIV-1 infection of primary lymphocytes and may provide insights into the pathogenesis of CD4+ T cell decline in AIDS patients.
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Materials and Methods |
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Production of Transgenic Mice.
The human CXCR4 (hCXCR4) cDNA was obtained by PCR from the human PBL cDNA library (Human Peripheral Blood Leukocyte Quick-CloneTM; Clontech, Palo Alto, CA) using the following primers: primer 1, 5'-TGAGTCGACTGAGTGCTCCAGTAGCCACC; primer 2, 5'-TAGGTCGACAGATCTTGTACAATATTGGTCAGTCTT. PCR was done using cloned PFU DNA polymerase (Stratagene Inc., La Jolla, CA) for 30 cycles each consisting of 1 min at 94°C, 1 min at 55°C, and 3 min 72°C. The cDNA product was digested with SalI restriction endonuclease and inserted into the SalI site of the mouse CD4 transgene designed for restricted expression of a transgene in CD4+ T cells (16). The 40-kb genomic fragment containing all exons as well as 5' and 3' region of the human CD4 (hCD4) gene was joined with the murine CD4 enhancer (17). These two transgenes were separated from the vectors on an agarose gel, purified, and coinjected into the nuclei of mouse oocytes of (B6D2)F1 mice. Transgenic founders were screened for the expression of hCD4 and hCXCR4 in their PBLs by FACS® (Becton Dickinson and Co., Mountain View, CA) analysis, as well as for the integration of transgenes (hCD4 and hCXCR4) in their genomic DNA by PCR analysis. The founders were mated with C57BL/6J mice to generate the progeny. Mice are maintained in the SPF facility (Department of Experimental Animal Research, RIKEN).Cell Culture and Infection Assays.
Human PBMCs purified with the lymphosepar I buffer (IBL, Fujioka, Japan) and mouse thymocytes passed through a nylon mesh were washed with PBS, and then cultured at 5 × 105 (PBMCs) and 5 × 106 (thymocytes) cells/ml in RPMI complete medium containing 3 µg/ml PHA (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, MO) and 4 ng/ml recombinant human IL-2 (PeproTech EC, London, UK) or murine IL-2 (R&D Systems, Inc., Minneapolis, MN). On day 2, cells were harvested, counted, and 106 (human PBMCs) or 5 × 106 (murine thymocytes) cells were inoculated with the medium (1 ml) containing HIV-1 viruses (5 ng of p24 antigen) at 37°C for 3 h in the presence of 5 µg/ml polybrene (Sigma Chemical Co.). After washing three times with PBS, cells were treated with trypsin (0.025%) EDTA (0.27 mM) (GIBCO BRL, Gaithersburg, MD) for 3 min at 37°C, and then washed with complete medium three times. Cells were cultured in the presence of human or murine IL-2 (4 ng/ml). IL-2 was added to the culture medium every 2 d. On indicated days after infection, the supernatant (200 µl) was removed for a p24 enzyme immunoassay (Abbott, Abbott Park, IL).Construction of SDF-1-C1.
Flow Cytometry Analysis.
FACS® analysis was performed on FACSort (Becton Dickinson and Co.). Peripheral blood from mice was incubated in red blood cell lysis buffer and washed with PBS, and 105 cells were stained with monoclonal antibodies on ice for 30 min in PBS containing FCS (5%) and the Fc block (PharMingen, San Diego, CA) for hCXCR4 staining, or normal mouse serum (10%) for hCD4 staining. For anti-hCXCR4 staining, anti-mouse IgG2a-FITC was used as the secondary antibody. After washing with PBS, cells were analyzed on a FACSort. For SDF-1-CPCR Amplification of HIV Proviral DNA.
Thymocytes infected with HIV strains in vitro as described above were harvested on day 2 after infection. Genomic DNA was extracted from these cells (21). PCR was performed with primers (LTR5: 5'-GGCTAACTAGGGAACCCACTGCTT-3', and LTR6: 5'-CTGCTAGAGATTTTCCACACTGAC-3') for the early product of proviral DNA, or primers (LTR5 and 5NC2: 5'-CCGAGTCCTGCGTCGAGAGAGC-3') for its late product (22), in combination with the IL-1 primers (5'-CTCTAGAGCACCATGCTACAGAC-3', and 5'-TGGAATCCAGGGGAAACACTG-3') of the murine IL-1 gene, which served as a control. Reactions were done in 50 µl of reaction mixture for 35 cycles. Southern hybridization was performed with the oligo nucleotide probes, LTR9 (5'-GCCTCAATAAAGCTTGCCTTG-3') for HIV DNA and mIL-1 (5'-TGTAAGAATACCCAGACAGCTTTAAGGATGGGAGGG-3') for the IL-1 gene, labeled with digoxigenin-ddUTP, and detection was performed using a DIG luminescent detection system (Boehringer Mannheim, Mannheim, Germany).Chemotaxis Assay.
Chemotaxis assays for murine and human lymphocytes were performed as previously described (23). In brief, murine splenic mononuclear cells purified with lymphosepar II (IBL), or human PBMCs purified with lymphosepar I (IBL) were washed three times with PBS, resuspended in RPMI containing 0.25% BSA, and 106 cells in 100 µl were added to the top chambers of 50-µm-pore polycarbonate Transwell (Costar Corp., Cambridge, MA). For pretreatment of lymphocytes with pertussis toxin, cells were incubated with complete medium containing pertussis toxin (100 ng/ml) or medium alone for 2 h at 37°C under 5% CO2, and were then washed twice with PBS. Human SDF-1In Vivo Migration Assays.
Donor lymphocytes were prepared from the spleen and the peritoneal lymph node of mice that were either doubly transgenic for hCD4 and hCXCR4 or singly transgenic for hCD4. The lymphocytes (5-9 × 106) were injected in the tail vein of normal mice (BDF1) (24). After 3 or 16 h, the recipient mice were killed, cells from their tissues were stained with anti-hCD4 FITC, anti-mCD4 PE, and anti-mCD8 TRICOLOR, and the cells were analyzed by three-color flow cytometry. ![]() |
Results |
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Two transgenes containing either hCD4 genomic DNA or hCXCR4 cDNA were constructed under the control of CD4 gene cis elements to express them specifically in CD4+ T cells (16, 17). These constructs were comicroinjected into the nuclei of fertilized murine oocytes. Of transgenic offspring, mouse No. 12 displayed the highest level of both hCD4 and hCXCR4 expression in T lymphocytes. Both transgenes were cotransmitted to all transgene-positive progeny of this mouse, indicating that the two constructs were stably integrated into the same chromosome. Mouse No. 12's progeny were therefore analyzed in detail.
In FACS® profiles of their lymphocytes, human CD4
and hCXCR4 were coexpressed in the CD4 subset, but
not in the CD8 subset, of peripheral T lymphocytes (Fig. 1,
A and B). Both molecules were also detected specifically on
CD4+CD8+ (double positive) and CD4+CD8 thymocytes
of transgenic mice (Fig. 1, C and D, and data not shown).
Human CD4, but not hCXCR4, was also detected in
monocytes, B lymphocytes, and NK cells of transgenic
mice, albeit at lower levels (data not shown). The hCD4
expression level in transgenic peripheral CD4+ T cells was
higher than that seen in human PBLs. The hCXCR4 expression level (mean fluorescence intensity [MFI]: 12.44)
was also higher than that seen in unstimulated human PBLs
(MFI: 4.13), but lower than that in human PBLs stimulated
by PHA and IL-2 (MFI: 20.19). Since SDF-1 is a natural
ligand for CXCR4, SDF-1 binding assays were performed
for transgenic and nontransgenic T lymphocytes using murine SDF-1
-huC
1 fusion protein. Murine SDF-1
(mSDF-1
) is 98.6% identical to human SDF-1
(hSDF-1
) in its predicted amino acid sequences and is thought to
interact with hCXCR4 (13, 25). Murine SDF-1
binding
activity was significantly higher in transgenic CD4 single
positive (SP) T lymphocytes and double positive thymocytes, but not in CD8 SP T lymphocytes, in line with
the hCXCR4 expression pattern in transgenic mice (Fig. 1 E and data not shown). This result indicates that total receptors for murine SDF-1, including endogenous CXCR4
and hCXCR4, are overexpressed specifically in CD4+ T
lymphocytes of transgenic mice. The level of SDF-1 receptor expression in transgenic CD4+ T cells (MFI; 76.82) was
in the physiological range observed in control mouse CD4+
T cell blasts activated with PHA (5 µg/ml), Con A (2 µg/ml), and mIL-2 (5 ng/ml) for 1 d in vitro (MFI; 138.06). The
levels of SDF-1 receptor in normal mouse thymocytes and
peripheral T lymphocytes will be published elsewhere (Suzuki, G., Y. Nakata, Y. Dan, A. Uzawa, K. Nakagawa, T. Sato, K. Mita, and T. Shirasawa, manuscript in preparation).
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Although several chemokine receptors have been shown to facilitate HIV entry into cell lines, it remains to be determined whether they are able to render mouse primary immune cells susceptible to HIV infection. We therefore studied the susceptibility of transgenic lymphocytes to HIV-1 infection in vitro. Transgenic thymocytes express hCXCR4 at a higher level than peripheral lymphocytes (Fig. 1, B and D), so we used them for in vitro HIV infection. HIV gag p24 antigen production was clearly detected in the culture supernatant of transgenic thymocytes exposed to T-tropic strains IIIB and SF2, showing a time course more rapid than that of human PBMCs (Fig. 2 A). The p24 level produced by transgenic thymocytes was significantly lower, however, than that produced by human PBMCs after 4 d of infection. Barriers to efficient HIV replication may therefore still exist in transgenic mouse thymocytes (26), or, alternatively, this may reflect the poor viability of mouse thymocytes at this stage of culturing. In contrast, M-tropic HIV-1 strain SF162 neither allowed control nor transgenic thymocytes to produce the p24 antigen, in line with previous observations that M-tropic strains use different chemokine receptor classes to enter cells (5, 6, 9, 10). Genomic DNA from mouse thymocytes was subjected to PCR amplification using HIV primers. Both early- and late-stage products were detected specifically in DNA isolated from transgenic thymocytes exposed to the T-tropic HIV-1 strain (Fig. 2 B).
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Compared with thymocytes, lower levels of p24 antigens were detected in the culture supernatants of spleen lymphocytes exposed to T-tropic HIV strains (data not shown). This may be due, at least in part, to their lower hCXCR4 expression compared with that in thymocytes.
Abnormal Tissue Distribution of CD4 SP T Lymphocytes.Interestingly, transgenic mice had significantly lower CD4
SP (CD4+CD8) T cell counts in peripheral blood (Fig. 3,
A and B). CD8 SP (CD4
CD8+) T cell counts were also
slightly reduced, but reduction varied with the individual
mouse (data not shown). In contrast, the proportion and
number of CD4 SP T cells in the thymus, and especially in bone marrow, were elevated (Fig. 3, A and B). Since bone
marrow contains immature CD4 positive cells, three-color
analysis was conducted using antibodies against murine
CD3, CD4, and CD8. The number of mature CD3-positive CD4 SP T cells increased significantly in the bone
marrow of transgenic mice (Fig. 3 B). Both the lymph nodes and spleen maintained relatively higher percentages
of CD4 SP T cells than did peripheral blood (Fig. 3 B).
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These findings suggest that CD4 SP T cell reduction in peripheral blood was due to neither reduced production in the thymus nor elimination from peripheral tissues, but was due, rather, to abnormal distribution in tissue compartments. Other double transgenic mouse lines expressing hCD4 and undetectable levels of hCXCR4 in peripheral CD4 SP T cells showed normal CD4 SP T cell counts in peripheral blood (data not shown). Human CD4 expression alone at high levels in CD4 SP T cells in hCD4 single transgenic mice did not reduce the number of these cells in peripheral blood (data not shown; see references 17 and 27). Moreover, the administration of pertussis toxin, a specific G protein blocker, to transgenic mice predominantly increased the CD4 subset in blood, and, reciprocally, decreased levels observed in bone marrow (Fig. 3, C and D). These results suggest that signaling through hCXCR4, rather than through hCD4, is critical in developing this phenotype.
Augmented Chemotactic Response to SDF-1.It was recently found that SDF-1, the natural ligand for CXCR4, functions as a potent chemoattractant for murine and human T lymphocytes in vitro, and for murine lymphocytes in vivo (23, 28). In vitro chemotaxis assay demonstrated that transgenic CD4 SP T cells, but not CD8 SP T cells, were more hyperresponsive to SDF-1 than were nontransgenic cells, indicating that hCXCR4 expression in CD4 SP T cells increases their responsiveness to SDF-1 (Fig. 4 A). They were even more sensitive to SDF-1 than human CD4 SP T cells, which may be explained by the hCXCR4 expression level in transgenic CD4 SP T cells, which is higher than that of unstimulated human PBLs. Cell migration was eliminated by pretreatment with pertussis toxin, indicating that G-protein participates in signaling through CXCR4, similar to other seven-transmembrane receptors (Fig. 4 B). The response of CD4 SP T cells to several other lymphocyte chemoattractants was, however, similar between transgenic and nontransgenic mice (Table 1).
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Based on these in vivo and in vitro findings, it is tempting to speculate that large numbers of transgenic CD4 SP T cells migrate and become trapped in mouse tissues, such as bone marrow (29), whose stromal cells produce high levels of SDF-1, resulting in the loss of circulating CD4 SP T cells from the blood. It is important to note that the predicted amino acid sequences of both SDF-1 and CXCR4 are highly conserved between the human and mouse, and that murine SDF-1 induces signals through human CXCR4 (13, 25, 30, and see Discussion).
Biased Migration of Transgenic CD4+ T Cells.We analyzed
the in vivo migration of transgenic CD4+ T cells in cell
transfer experiments. Peripheral lymphocytes of transgenic mice were injected intravenously into normal mice. Those
of another transgenic mouse line, which expressed hCD4
but not hCXCR4 on its CD4 subset of T cells, were also
injected into mice as controls. 3 or 16 h after injection, human CD4-positive murine CD4+CD8 T lymphocytes in
tissues of recipient mice were analyzed and counted using
three-color flow cytometry (Fig. 5, A and B). The number
of circulating double transgenic CD4 SP T cells in peripheral blood was significantly lower than that of single transgenic CD4 SP T cells. In contrast, double transgenic CD4
SP T cell migration to bone marrow was higher than that
of single transgenic control CD4 SP T cells. This discrepancy appeared increasingly pronounced when tissues were
analyzed 16 h after cell transfer. Both transgenic CD4 SP T
cells migrated to the spleen in similar numbers (data not
shown). These results are compatible with the tissue distribution of CD4 SP T cells seen in double transgenic mice,
and support the notion that the expression of hCXCR4 altered CD4 SP T cell homeostasis in blood by enhancing
their migration to specific tissues, such as bone marrow.
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Discussion |
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In this study, we analyzed transgenic mice coexpressing human CD4 and CXCR4 predominantly in their CD4+ T cells. The expression of these molecules facilitated the infection of mouse primary thymocytes with T-tropic strains of HIV-1 in vitro. Transgenic mice also displayed severe CD4+ T cell depletion in peripheral blood, with a concomitant increase of these cells in bone marrow. We demonstrated that trafficking of transgenic CD4+ T cells was biased toward bone marrow, inducing the CD4+ T cell loss from the blood pool. This phenotype has not been observed in transgenic mouse lines expressing hCD4 alone and was normalized transiently upon administration of a specific G-protein inhibitor, pertussis toxin. These findings and in vivo cell migration analysis indicated that signaling through hCXCR4 was a primary factor in developing this phenotype.
T-tropic HIV-1 Susceptibility of Transgenic Mouse Thymocytes.The simultaneous expression of hCD4 and hCXCR4 in mouse CD4 T lymphocytes removed the restriction of HIV-1 infection in these cells to some extent. The level of p24 antigens, however, was significantly lower than that produced by human PBMCs after 4-6 d of infection (Fig. 2 A). This suggests that additional cellular factors are required to efficiently replicate viruses in mouse lymphocytes and presumably for the generalized HIV-1 infection in mice. It has been reported, for example, that cellular elements required for Tat and Rev functions during postentry HIV life cycle processes are lacking in mouse cell lines (26). Unlike T-tropic strains, M-tropic strain SF162 was shown to be noninfectious for transgenic thymocytes, which agrees with previous observations that M-tropic strains use different classes of chemokine receptors to enter cells (5, 6, 9, 10).
Human CD4 expression alone in mice does not confer sensitivity to T-tropic HIV-1 infection (31). The T-tropic HIV-1 sensitivity of hCD4+ single transgenic thymocytes was similar to that of nontransgenic thymocytes in our experiments (data not shown). Human CXCR4 expression, therefore, appears to be required for susceptibility, and structural differences in CXCR4 between the human and mouse may critically affect virus entry in primary T lymphocytes. However, rodent CXCR4 expression in nonpermissive hCD4+ cell lines has been shown to render these cells susceptible to T-tropic HIV-1 (32). Since the quantity of SDF-1 receptors was significantly higher in CD4+ T cells of double transgenic mice than in controls (Fig. 1 E), it is alternatively possible that the CXCR4 quantity expressed on the cell surface, irrespective of the species, may determine HIV-1 susceptibility and that endogenous CXCR4 levels expressed in lymphocytes from hCD4 single transgenic mice are not high enough for susceptibility.
Role of CXCR4 in Lymphocyte Trafficking and Homeostasis.Lymphocyte migration through tissues is thought to involve various surface molecules such as adhesion molecules and chemokine receptors at multiple steps, and its physiological regulation appears complex (35, 36). CXCR4 molecules are expressed on hematopoietic cells such as lymphocytes and monocytes (28). Although mRNA of SDF-1, a natural ligand for CXCR4, can be detected in lymphoid and nonlymphoid tissues, its expression in bone marrow stromal cells is especially high (29). Since SDF-1 can function as a potent chemoattractant for lymphocytes (23) and hematopoietic progenitor cells (37), it has been proposed that it plays a role in lymphocyte trafficking through tissues for immune surveillance (23, 28) and in the homing of hematopoietic progenitor cells to bone marrow microenvironments (37). In SDF-1 null mice, hematolymphopoiesis was abolished in bone marrow but not in fetal liver, consistent with the proposed role for the SDF-1/CXCR4 pathway in hematopoietic cell development (38). Since these mice die perinatally, however, the in vivo role of SDF-1 for lymphocytes in adult mice has not been clarified.
The primary structures of murine and human SDF-1 are identical except for a single amino acid change of Ile to Val at position 18 (13), and mSDF-1 induces signals through hCXCR4 and vice versa (13, 25). CXCR4 is also highly conserved between the mouse and human, especially in its transmembrane and cytoplasmic amino acid sequences (96% identical) (30). Transgenic CD4+ T cells that express hCXCR4 showed, in fact, significantly higher mSDF-1 binding activity than those of controls (Fig. 1 E), indicating that transgenic mice overexpress receptors for endogenous SDF-1, specifically in their CD4+ T cells. This is compatible with the functional analysis showing that CD4, but not CD8, SP T cells of transgenic mice had a heightened chemotactic response to SDF-1 (Fig. 4). These mice thus provide an SDF-1 receptor-overexpression model for clarifying the in vivo role of the SDF-1/CXCR4 pathway in lymphocyte lineage cells. SDF-1 binding activity of transgenic CD4+ T cells was in a physiological range similar to the upregulated level in nontransgenic T cells upon in vitro activation.
Our findings on transgenic mice are summarized as follows: (a) CD4 SP T cell depletion in peripheral blood accompanying their accumulation in bone marrow (Fig. 3, A and B); (b) transient normalization of this abnormal CD4 SP T cell distribution upon administration of a G-protein blocker, pertussis toxin (Fig. 3, C and D); and (c) preferential migration of hCD4+hCXCR4+ double transgenic CD4 SP T cells toward bone marrow and their rapid disappearance from peripheral blood, compared with hCD4+ single transgenic CD4 SP T cells, in cell transfer experiments (Fig. 5). These findings suggest that the CXCR4 pathway participates in lymphocyte trafficking through tissues and, specifically, may play a key role in lymphocyte circulation between peripheral blood and bone marrow whose stromal cells produce high levels of SDF-1 (29). It has been shown that CXCR4 expression in T lymphocytes is regulated by activation (28). The regulation of CXCR4 expression may therefore modulate lymphocyte trafficking between the blood pool and bone marrow reservoir (39, 40), influencing lymphocyte homeostasis in these compartments under physiological and pathological conditions such as viral infection and autoimmune diseases (Fig. 6 A). In our transgenic mice, such homeostasis appears to be specifically disrupted in CD4 SP T cells that constitutively express hCXCR4 (Fig. 6 B).
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Other molecule(s) involved in cell migration rather than CXCR4 may play a role in developing the transgenic mouse phenotype. Forced CXCR4 expression, for example, would modulate other pertussis-toxin-sensitive chemokine receptors that actually induce the phenotype. The in vitro chemotaxis of transgenic CD4 SP T cells to several lymphocyte chemoattractants other than SDF-1, however, did not significantly differ from that of nontransgenic CD4 SP T cells (Table 1), favoring the possibility that signaling through hCXCR4 upon binding endogenous SDF-1 changed the CD4 SP T cell distribution in transgenic mice.
Hypothetical AIDS Pathogenesis Model.The resemblance of blood lymphocyte profiles of transgenic mice and AIDS patients prompts us to surmise a link between CXCR4 function and AIDS pathogenesis. CXCR4high lymphocytes (e.g., activated lymphocytes; reference 28), are expected to migrate preferentially to bone marrow, as suggested by our transgenic mice, and presumably to other tissues or microenvironments that produce critical SDF-1 levels. The CXCR4 expression level appears correlated with T-tropic HIV-1 infectability (41). When bone marrow contains active HIV replication loci (42, 43), such a milieu may provide selective pressure to accumulate viruses that use CXCR4 for cell entry, and would accelerate T-tropic HIV-1 infection by recruiting susceptible CXCR4high CD4+ T cells. This would lead to a severe CD4+ T cell trafficking imbalance in the bone marrow compartment, where infected cells would be destroyed and unable to return to the blood pool, and the situation would eventually resemble that resulting from "trapping" in the bone marrow of transgenic mice (Fig. 6 C). Such an absorption of CD4+ T cells from circulating blood may also finally drain peripheral lymphoid organs.
Clinical observations that HIV-1 infection and activity in bone marrow correlate with CD4 cell depletion in progressive stages (43) appear to support this hypothesis. According to this view, the recovery of CD4+ T cell homeostasis in the peripheral blood of patients after potent anti-HIV therapy (46) could be due, at least in part, to an improved trafficking imbalance. Observations that SDF-1 inhibits T-tropic HIV-1 replication in vitro (13, 14, 41) may contradict this model. It is conceivable, however, that SDF-1 gradients in bone marrow microenvironments generate local regions displaying levels that enable T-tropic HIV-1 to replicate. It has been shown that the concentration of SDF-1 required to inhibit HIV-1 infection appears to be significantly higher than that required for receptor signaling or binding (47). Many CXCR4 using primary HIV-1 isolates were also shown to be resistant to SDF-1-mediated suppression of PBMC infection in contrast to laboratory-adapted, T cell line-tropic strains (48). The analysis of in situ SDF-1 expression, CXCR4 expression in lymphocyte subsets, and the status of HIV replication in tissues, including bone marrow, during HIV-1 infection may therefore help further our understanding of AIDS pathogenesis.
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Footnotes |
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Address correspondence to Shinichiro Sawada, Sakigake Laboratory, Tsukuba Life Science Center, The Institute of Physical and Chemical Research (RIKEN), 3-1-1 Koyadai, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305, Japan. Phone: 81-298-36-9038; Fax: 81-298-36-9039; E-mail: sawada{at}rtcmain.rtc.riken.go.jp
Received for publication 19 September 1997 and in revised form 2 March 1998.
We thank S. Ishii for support and comments on the manuscript, H. Nakauchi for support, D.R. Littman,
J.A. Hoxie, and H. Yagita for transgenic vectors, an 12G5 antibody, and pC1/Bluescript SK (
) vector,
respectively, and T. Yamaguchi and T. Obina for technical assistance.
This work was supported by Japan Science and Technology Corporation (S. Sawada).
Abbreviations used in this paper CD4 (and CD8) SP, CD4 (and CD8) single positive; h, human; m, murine; M-tropic, macrophage-tropic; MIP, macrophage inflammatory protein; RANTES, regulated on activation, normal T cell expressed and secreted; SDF-1, stromal cell-derived factor 1; T-tropic, T cell line-tropic.
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