Saltar al contenido
Merck

Principles Governing Establishment versus Collapse of HIV-1 Cellular Spread.

Cell host & microbe (2019-11-26)
Jason M Hataye, Joseph P Casazza, Katharine Best, C Jason Liang, Taina T Immonen, David R Ambrozak, Samuel Darko, Amy R Henry, Farida Laboune, Frank Maldarelli, Daniel C Douek, Nicolas W Hengartner, Takuya Yamamoto, Brandon F Keele, Alan S Perelson, Richard A Koup
RESUMEN

A population at low census might go extinct or instead transition into exponential growth to become firmly established. Whether this pivotal event occurs for a within-host pathogen can be the difference between health and illness. Here, we define the principles governing whether HIV-1 spread among cells fails or becomes established by coupling stochastic modeling with laboratory experiments. Following ex vivo activation of latently infected CD4 T cells without de novo infection, stochastic cell division and death contributes to high variability in the magnitude of initial virus release. Transition to exponential HIV-1 spread often fails due to release of an insufficient amount of replication-competent virus. Establishment of exponential growth occurs when virus produced from multiple infected cells exceeds a critical population size. We quantitatively define the crucial transition to exponential viral spread. Thwarting this process would prevent HIV transmission or rebound from the latent reservoir.

MATERIALES
Referencia del producto
Marca
Descripción del producto

Sigma-Aldrich
Lectina de Phaseolus vulgaris (frijol rojo), Phytohemagglutinin PHA-M, lyophilized powder
Sigma-Aldrich
Efavirenz, ≥98% (HPLC)