Morphological and ultrastructural changes induced in corneal epithelial cells by HIV-1 and HHV-6in vitro
- 1 January 1996
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Current Eye Research
- Vol. 15 (6) , 597-604
- https://doi.org/10.3109/02713689609008899
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to determine whether HIV-1 and HHV-6 are capable of infecting and inducing morphological and ultrastructural changes in corneal epithelial cells in vitro. Primary and transformed corneal epithelial cell cultures were infected with HIV-1 or HHV-6 in vitro and analyzed for the presence or absence of viral antigens, DNA sequences, viral particles and inclusions. HIV-1 antigens were detected in 8% of the HIV-1 infected cells and early HHV-6 antigens were present in 12% of the HHV-6 infected cells. The presence of viral DNA sequences in the cultures confirmed these findings. Cells infected with HIV-1 morphologically were not different from uninfected cells, whereas the morphology of HHV-6 infected cells was very similar to cells infected with other human herpesviruses. Cytoplasmic tubuloreticular inclusions were detectable in corneal epithelia cells infected with HIV-1 and intact viral particles were visible only in PBMC used to recover HIV-1 from these cultures. Viral inclusions were also observed in corneal epithelial cells infected with HHV-6. These data indicate that HIV-1 and HHV-6 are capable of infecting corneal epithelial cells in vitro, but the viruses are not entering these cells via CD4 or galC receptors. This basic information is important in determining the pathogenic mechanism(s) involved in the development of AIDS-associated corneal disorders.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Human Herpesvirus 6: The Virus and The Search for Its Role as a Human PathogenPublished by Elsevier ,1992
- Inhibition of Entry of HIV-1 in Neural Cell Lines by Antibodies Against Galactosyl CeramideScience, 1991
- Human microglial cells: Characterization in cerebral tissue and in primary culture, and study of their susceptibility to HIV‐1 infectionAnnals of Neurology, 1991
- Replication of HIV-1 in a wide variety of animal cells following phenotypic mixing with murine retrovirusesVirology, 1990
- Human immunodeficiency virus infection studied in CD4-expressing human-murine T-cell hybridsVirology, 1989
- Productive dual infection of human CD4+ T lymphocytes by HIV-1 and HHV-6Nature, 1989
- Utilization of human hematopoietic cell lines for the propagation and characterization of HBLV (human herpesvirus 6)International Journal of Cancer, 1988
- ISOLATION OF HUMAN T-LYMPHOTROPIC VIRUS TYPE III FROM THE TEARS OF A PATIENT WITH THE ACQUIRED IMMUNODEFICIENCY SYNDROMEThe Lancet, 1985
- The CD4 (T4) antigen is an essential component of the receptor for the AIDS retrovirusNature, 1984
- Phenotypic Mixing between Murine Oncoviruses and Murine CytomegalovirusJournal of General Virology, 1979