INTERACTIONS BETWEEN HIV-INFECTED MONOCYTES AND THE EXTRACELLULAR-MATRIX - HIV-INFECTED MONOCYTES SECRETE NEUTRAL METALLOPROTEASES THAT DEGRADE BASEMENT-MEMBRANE PROTEIN MATRICES

被引:28
作者
DHAWAN, S
TORO, LA
JONES, BE
MELTZER, MS
机构
[1] WALTER REED ARMY MED CTR,DEPT CELLULAR IMMUNOL,DIV COMMUNICABLE DIS & IMMUNOL,WASHINGTON,DC 20307
[2] NEI,BETHESDA,MD 20892
关键词
BASEMENT MEMBRANE; EXTRACELLULAR MATRIX; METALLOPROTEASE; HIV-1;
D O I
10.1002/jlb.52.2.244
中图分类号
Q2 [细胞生物学];
学科分类号
071009 ; 090102 ;
摘要
The frequency of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected monocytes that spread on a model basement membrane was about twofold greater than that of an equal number of uninfected control cells through the initial 12 to 18 h of culture. By 24 h, virtually all HIV-infected and uninfected control cells spread on the basement membrane gel. The frequency of spread cells in the uninfected control population was < 10% of total cells by 12 days. In contrast, 30 to 40% of HIV-infected monocytes remained spread through this time interval and formed a dense interdigitated network of cell processes on and into the gel matrix. Invasion of the basement membrane matrix by HIV-infected monocytes suggested increased secretion of proteases able to digest the gel. Indeed, levels of neutral protease activity in culture fluids from HIV-infected monocytes were significantly higher than those from equal numbers of uninfected control cells. High levels of protease activity in culture fluids of HIV-infected monocytes required productive virus infection and were not observed with cells exposed to T cell-tropic HIV isolates. The predominant protease activity in these cultures was a 92-kd neutral metallogelatinase. HIV-induced changes in monocyte metalloprotease activity may be important for extravasation of infected cells to tissue or for the development of AIDS-associated neuropathology, carcinogenesis, and opportunistic infection.
引用
收藏
页码:244 / 248
页数:5
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