Electron tomography visualization of HIV-1 virions trapped by fusion inhibitors to host cells in infected tissues
- Editor:
- Liu, Shan-Lu
Abstract
HIV-1 delivers its genetic material to infect a cell after fusion of the viral and host cell membranes, which takes place after the viral envelope (Env) binds host receptor and co-receptor proteins. Binding of host receptor CD4 to Env results in conformational changes that allow interaction with a host co-receptor (CCR5 or CXCR4). Further conformational rearrangements result in an elongated pre-hairpin intermediate structure in which Env is anchored to the viral membrane by its transmembrane region and to the host cell membrane by its fusion peptide. Although budding virions can be readily imaged by electron tomography (ET) of HIV-1-infected tissues and cultured cells, virions that are fusing (attached to host cells via pre-hairpin intermediates) are not normally visualized, perhaps because the process of membrane fusion is too fast to capture by ET. To image virions during fusion, we used fusion inhibitors to prevent downstream conformational changes in Env that lead to membrane fusion, thereby trapping HIV-1 virions linked to target cells by pre-hairpin intermediates. ET of HIV-1 pseudovirions bound to CD4+/CCR5+ TZM-bl cells revealed presumptive pre-hairpin intermediates as 2–4 narrow spokes linking a virion to the cell surface. To extend these results to a more physiological setting, we used ET to image tissues and organs derived from humanized bone marrow/liver/thymus mice infected with HIV-1 and then treated with CPT31, a high-affinity D-peptide fusion inhibitor linked to cholesterol. Trapped HIV-1 virions were found in all tissues studied (small intestine, mesenteric lymph nodes, spleen, and bone marrow), and spokes representing pre-hairpin intermediates linking trapped virions to cell surfaces were similar in structure and number to those seen in the previous pseudovirus and cultured cell ET study.
Copyright and License
© 2024 American Society for Microbiology.
Data Availability
Electron tomography data (tilt series, 3D reconstructions, segmented models) are available from the authors upon request.
Acknowledgement
The authors thank Brett Welch for providing CPT31, Michael Brehm and Dale Greiner (U Mass Chan Medical School) for providing BLT mice, the Caltech Cryo-EM Center for maintenance of the T12 electron microscope, and Walther Mothes and members of the Bjorkman and Kay laboratories for helpful discussions and critical review of the manuscript.
Funding
This work was supported by NIH U54 AI170856 (M.S.K. and P.J.B.), NIH R01AI145164 (P.K.), and CIHR grant #422148 (P.K.).
Supplemental Material
- Supplemental legend - jvi.01432-24-s0001.docx: Legend for Movie S1.
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Movie S1 - jvi.01432-24-s0002.mp4: Identification and segmentation of inhibitor-trapped virions in HIV-1-infected, CPT31-treated humanized BLT mouse bone marrow.
Files
Additional details
- PMCID
- PMC11575291
- National Institutes of Health
- U54 AI170856
- National Institutes of Health
- R01AI145164
- Canadian Institutes of Health Research
- 422148
- Accepted
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2024-09-26Accepted
- Available
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2024-10-30Published online
- Available
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2024-11-19Published in issue
- Caltech groups
- Division of Biology and Biological Engineering
- Publication Status
- Published