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* Division of Cell Growth and Regulation,
§ Division of Human
Retrovirology, Contributed by Arthur B. Pardee, May 30, 1997
Copyright © 1997 by the National Academy of Sciences.
We report that human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) has
evolved a self-perpetuating mechanism to actively generate cells
permissive for productive and cytopathic infection. Only activated T
cells can be productively infected, which leads to their rapid
depletion (2 × 109/day in an infected individual).
Establishment of productive HIV-1 infection therefore requires
continual activations from the large pool of quiescent T cells. Tat
protein, which is secreted by infected cells, activated uninfected
quiescent T cells in vitro and in vivo.
These Tat-activated uninfected cells became highly permissive for
productive HIV-1 infection. Activation of primary T cells by Tat
protein involved integrin receptors and was associated with activation
of mitogen-activated protein kinases, including ERK1 and JNK kinase.
Accordingly, these primary T cells progressed from G0 to
the late G1 phase of the cell cycle.