4.5 Article

HIV-1 Establishes a Sanctuary Site in the Testis by Permeating the BTB Through Changes in Cytoskeletal Organization

期刊

ENDOCRINOLOGY
卷 162, 期 11, 页码 -

出版社

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/endocr/bqab156

关键词

HIV-1; testis; Sertoli cell; tight junction; Tat protein; actin cytoskeleton; microtubule cytoskeleton

资金

  1. Eunice Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institutes of Health (NICHD, NIH) [R01 HD056034]
  2. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID, NIH) [R56 AI098546-06]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Research suggests that HIV-1 can invade the testis by perturbing the blood-testis barrier, allowing the virus to enter the seminiferous epithelium by inducing cytoskeletal changes in Sertoli cells.
Studies suggest that HIV-1 invades the testis through initial permeation of the blood-testis barrier (BTB). The selectivity of the BTB to antiretroviral drugs makes this site a sanctuary for the virus. Little is known about how HIV-1 crosses the BTB and invades the testis. Herein, we used 2 approaches to examine the underlying mechanism(s) by which HIV-1 permeates the BTB and gains entry into the seminiferous epithelium. First, we examined if recombinant Tat protein was capable of perturbing the BTB and making the barrier leaky, using the primary rat Sertoli cell in vitro model that mimics the BTB in vivo. Second, we used HIV-1-infected Sup-T1 cells to investigate the activity of HIV-1 infection on cocultured Sertoli cells. Using both approaches, we found that the Sertoli cell tight junction permeability barrier was considerably perturbed and that HIV-1 effectively permeates the BTB by inducing actin-, microtubule-, vimentin-, and septin-based cytoskeletal changes in Sertoli cells. These studies suggest that HIV-1 directly perturbs BTB function, potentially through the activity of the Tat protein.

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