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413 Relative Potency of Protease Inhibitors in Monocytes/Macrophages Acutely and Chronically Infected with Human Immunodeficiency Virus Carlo-Federico Perno, Fonda M. Newcomb, David A. Davis, Stefano Aquaro, Rachel W. Humphrey,* Raffaele Caliò, and Robert Yarchoan HIV and AIDS Malignancy Branch, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland; Department of Experimental Medicine and Biochemical Sciences, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Rome, Italy The activity of three human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) protease inhibitors was investigated in human primary monocytes/macrophages (M/M) chronically infected by HIV-1. Saquinavir, KNI272, and ritonavir inhibited the replication of HIV-1 in vitro, with EC50s of Ç0.5 – 3.3 mM. However, only partial inhibition was achievable, even at the highest concentrations tested. Also, the activity of these drugs in chronically infected M/M was Ç7- to 26-fold lower than in acutely infected M/M and Ç2- to 10-fold lower than in chronically infected H9 lymphocytes. When protease inhibitors were removed from cultures of chronically infected M/M, production of virus rapidly returned to the levels found in untreated M/M. Therefore, relatively high concentrations of protease inhibitors are required to suppress HIV-1 production in chronically infected macrophages, and such cells may be a vulnerable point for the escape of virus in patients taking these drugs. The essential role of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) protease in the viral life cycle has led to the development of a number of inhibitors of the HIV-1 protease [1 – 12]. Several of these drugs have been found to be quite active in patients, especially in combination with dideoxynucleosides, and their introduction into clinical practice has resulted in an improved outlook for HIV-1 – infected patients. Other protease inhibitors are currently undergoing preclinical and clinical evaluation. Also, studies are ongoing to test whether potent combination regimens that include one or more of these compounds can eradicate HIV from the body [13 – 15]. HIV-1 protease inhibitors act during the late stages of HIV1 replication. These compounds inactivate the HIV-1 – encoded aspartyl protease and prevent cleavage of Gag and Gag-Pol polyproteins and, by this action, inhibit the production of mature infectious HIV-1 virions from cells already infected with HIV-1 [1, 2, 16]. In this respect, they differ from reverse transcriptase inhibitors, which act before formation of the provirus and prevent acute infection [17, 18]. The use of protease inhibitors in combination with reverse transcriptase inhibitors thus provides the ability to block viral replication at both early and Received 2 December 1997; revised 18 March 1998. Presented in part: 5th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, Chicago, 1 – 5 February 1998 (abstract 639). Financial support: Collaborative Research and Development Agreement between the National Cancer Institute and Japan Energy Co.; Italian Project on AIDS from the Italian Ministry of Health. Reprints or correspondence: Dr. Robert Yarchoan, Bldg. 10, Rm. 12N226, 10 Center Dr., MSC 1906, Bethesda, MD 20892-1906 ([email protected]). * Present affiliation: Pharmaceutical Division, Bayer Corp., West Haven, Connecticut. The Journal of Infectious Diseases 1998;178:413–22 q 1998 by the Infectious Diseases Society of America. All rights reserved. 0022–1899/98/7802–0015$02.00 / 9d4c$$au34 06-29-98 13:04:48 jinfa late stages of replication, and such combinations have proven highly effective in a number of clinical trials, with plasma HIV-1 frequently becoming undetectable by RNA polymerase chain reaction [11, 12, 19, 20]. Such potent inhibition of HIV1 replication has also been found to be associated with a decrease in the rate of development of HIV-1 resistance [21]. At the same time, the concern remains that if one or more drugs in a combination regimen have relatively less anti – HIV-1 activity in a particular cell type or anatomic compartment, this may permit continued HIV-1 replication in that cell or compartment, which may lead to the emergence of resistant virus. Therefore, it is important to understand the activity of HIV-1 protease inhibitors in various cell types and in various potential organs in which HIV-1 might be sequestered. A number of groups have demonstrated the ability of various protease inhibitors to block HIV-1 production in chronically infected T cell lines, in acute or chronically infected monocytelike cell lines, and in acutely infected monocytes/macrophages (M/M) [2, 22 – 28]. It has been reported that protease inhibitors have anti-HIV activity in chronically infected M/M [29], but little information is presently available regarding the relative activity of protease inhibitors in chronically infected M/M compared with other cell types. M/M and M/M-derived cells are important target cells for HIV-1 infection, may produce virus over a relatively long period of time, and appear to be the main reservoir of HIV-1 in the central nervous system [30 – 32]. It has been postulated that HIV-1 – infected M/M can persist for a relatively long time, with a t1/2 of 1 – 4 weeks, after introduction of highly effective antiretroviral therapy [33]. With this background, we undertook an investigation about the antiviral effect of three protease inhibitors in chronically infected M/M. The protease inhibitors used in this study were ritonavir, saquinavir, and KNI-272, the latter being a transition-state mimetic tripeptide inhibitor of the HIV-1 protease that is currently being investigated in clinical trials [34, 35]. UC: J Infect 414 Perno et al. Materials and Methods M/M and lymphocytes. Primary M/M were prepared and purified as described [36]. Briefly, peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were obtained from healthy HIV-1–negative donors by the Department of Transfusion Medicine, Warren G. Magnuson Clinical Center (Bethesda, MD). PBMC were separated over a ficoll gradient and seeded in 48-well plates at 1.5 1 106 cells/well in 1 mL of RPMI 1640 (Life Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD) containing 20% heat-inactivated, low-endotoxin, Mycoplasma-free fetal bovine serum (Hyclone Laboratories, Logan, UT), 4 mM Lglutamine (Life Technologies), 50 U/mL penicillin, and 50 mg/ mL streptomycin (Life Technologies) (hereinafter referred to as complete medium). For some experiments, PBMC obtained by the Blood Bank of the Frascati Hospital, Rome, were used. Complete medium was used in all experiments; no human serum was added in any experiment described herein. Five days after plating and culturing the PBMC at 377C in a humidified atmosphere enriched with 5% CO2, nonadherent cells were carefully removed with repeated washings with warmed RPMI 1640 as previously described [36], leaving a monolayer of adherent cells, which were finally incubated in complete medium. Cells treated under these conditions have previously been shown to be ú95% M/M, as determined by nonspecific esterase staining and morphology [37]. H9/LAI, a CD4 T cell line chronically infected by HIV-1LAI, was used in some experiments. To be consistent with the procedures used with M/M, the same complete medium containing 20% fetal bovine serum was also used for H9/LAI cells, both for cell passages and to assess the effect of antiviral drugs. Another CD4 T cell line, MT-2, was used for experiments of de novo (acute) infection. These cells manifest syncytium formation and cytopathic effect when infected by HIV-1, and these have been shown to correlate with the production of HIV-1 p24 into the supernatants [38]. MT-2 cells were also grown and passaged in the complete medium described above. Previous studies have shown that the activity of protease inhibitors determined in T cell lines such as MT-2 and H9 was similar to that determined in peripheral blood lymphocytes in cultures supplemented with fetal calf serum [8, 39–42]. HIV-1 isolates. Three different isolates of HIV-1 were used in this study. Unless specifically noted otherwise, a monocytotropic isolate of HIV-1, HIV-1Ba-L, was used in all experiments involving primary M/M. Virus was expanded and titered in primary M/M as previously described [36]. In selected experiments, another monocytotropic isolate of HIV-1, SRA1433, which was isolated from the cerebrospinal fluid of an HIV-1–infected child, was used (gift of S. Sei, NCI, NIH) [43]. After isolation, SRA1433 was passaged and titered in M/M. Finally, a prototypic lymphocytotropic isolate, HIV-1LAI, was used to infect MT-2 cells. The same virus is harbored in H9/LAI cells. Anti–HIV-1 drugs. Three protease inhibitors were used in these experiments: saquinavir (gift of I. Duncan, Roche Research Centre, Hertfordshire, UK); KNI-272 (gift of H. Hayashi, Japan Energy Corp., Tokyo); and ritonavir (provided by Abbott Laboratories, Abbott Park, IL). Stock solutions of each drug were made in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO; Calbiochem, La Jolla, CA) and stored at 0707C until used. As a control, the nucleoside reverse transcription inhibitor zidovudine was used in each experiment. Also, in each experiment, / 9d4c$$au34 06-29-98 13:04:48 jinfa JID 1998;178 (August) appropriate controls were run that used concentrations of DMSO comparable to those present in the most concentrated samples. Assessment of antiviral drug activity: chronically infected M/M. Two days after separation (i.e., 7 days after plating), M/M were challenged with HIV-1Ba-L or SRA1433 by adding 300 TCID50/mL. Twenty-four hours later, all wells were carefully washed to remove excess virus; M/M were then cultured in complete medium under the same conditions and fed every 5 days with fresh complete medium. HIV-1 p24 release in the supernatants was assessed every 3 days starting from day 7. On the basis of our previous experience [37, 44], chronic infection is generally established Ç7–10 days after viral challenge (some variation being detectable among different donors). In the experiments described herein, drug treatment began 14 days after infection, when HIV1 p24 production reached a plateau. Fourteen days after viral challenge (hereinafter called day 0), M/M were carefully washed at least twice to remove any virus present in the supernatants, replenished with fresh complete medium containing various concentrations of saquinavir, KNI-272, ritonavir, or zidovudine, and cultured under the same conditions as described before. Each drug concentration was run in triplicate or quadruplicate, while positive controls were run in sextuplicate. Starting from day 0, all M/M-containing wells were washed daily and replenished with fresh medium containing the appropriate drug concentration, according to the experimental protocol. In selected experiments devoted to assessing the activity of the protease inhibitors following their removal, the cells were extensively washed and the medium completely changed at day 5–6 after the beginning of treatment. Half of the wells were subsequently cultured without drugs while the other half were cultured in the presence of drugs as before. At each established time point, Ç1 mL of each supernatant was harvested and replaced with new medium with appropriate drugs as before. At the end of the experiment, the M/M were harvested and lysed for Western blot analysis (see below). Virus production was assessed at each time point by analysis of HIV-1 p24 production with a commercially available RIA (DuPont, Wilmington, DE). Previous experiments have shown that this assay has little cross-reactivity with uncleaved Gag and Gag-Pol (Humphrey RW, Perno CF, Yarchoan R, unpublished data). Assessment of drug activity: acutely infected M/M. The procedure for assessing drug activity in acutely infected M/M was similar to that described for chronically infected M/M, with the exception that antiviral drugs were added 30 min before viral challenge. Twenty-four hours after challenge, M/M were washed to remove the virus inoculum, complete medium containing the appropriate drug was replaced, and the M/M were then cultured for the duration of the experiments. Supernatants were collected at day 14 or 15 for assessment of virus production by analysis of HIV-1 p24 antigen as described before. M/M were harvested and lysed for Western blot analysis (see below). To assess drug toxicity in M/M, cells were treated for 7–14 days in the presence of different concentrations of saquinavir, KNI-272, and ritonavir. Cells were gently detached from the wells as described elsewhere, and cell viability was visually assessed by trypan blue exclusion [36]. Assessment of drug activity: chronically infected H9/LAI cells. Exponentially growing H9/LAI cells were washed at least twice with a large excess of medium and were plated in 48-well plates (as done for M/M) at a concentration of 3 1 104 cells/well in 1 UC: J Infect JID 1998;178 (August) HIV Protease Inhibitors in Macrophages mL of complete medium. At the same time of plating, various concentrations of each drug were added. At established time points, 100 mL of each supernatant was removed to assess HIV-1 p24 production by RIA. Additional supernatants were collected for Western blot. At the end of the experiment, the cells were then harvested for Western blot analysis (see below). Assessment of drug activity: acutely infected MT-2 cells. Exponentially growing MT-2 cells were plated in wells of a 48-well plate in the presence or absence of various concentrations of drugs and challenged 30 min later with 300 TCID50/mL HIV-1LAI. Viral replication was assessed by syncytium formation assay and by HIV-1 p24 RIA. The concentration of HIV-1 p24 antigen added at the time of infection was subtracted from the amount assayed at later time points. Determination of effective drug concentrations. Within each experiment, geometric mean p24 production was used to determine the EC50. The EC50 was determined by linear regression of the log of the percentage of HIV-1 p24 production (compared with untreated controls) versus the log of the drug concentration [45]. Western blot analysis. After cells were washed with PBS (BioWhittaker, Walkersville, MD), they were lysed with 0.75% Triton X-100 lysis buffer containing 300 mM NaCl, 50 mM TrisHCl, pH 7.4, 2 mL/mL DMSO, and a cocktail of protease inhibitors containing 10 mg/mL leupeptin, 20 mg/mL aprotinin, 25 mM pnitrophenyl guanidinobenzoate, and 10 mM KNI-272. After a 10min incubation in lysis buffer at 47C, the cell lysate was clarified by centrifugation for 10 min at 10,000 rpm. Total protein concentration was determined by the BCA assay (Pierce, Rockford, IL). Cell lysates were resuspended in SDS sample buffer containing 50 mM dithiothreitol. Cell lysate (2 mg) was electrophoresed on a 10% Bis-Tris polyacrylamide gel (Novex, San Diego), electroblotted onto nitrocellulose, and detected with a monoclonal mouse antibody to HIV-1 p24 (Intracel, Cambridge, MA). To assess the effects of protease inhibitors on released virus particles, the supernatants were harvested as described previously. Virus was pelleted by centrifugation at 22,000 rpm for 2 h at 47C. After washing the pellet once with PBS, the virus was repelleted under the same conditions. Virus pellets were disrupted with SDS sample buffer containing 50 mM dithiothreitol. Supernatants from M/M were electrophoresed on a 10% Bis-Tris polyacrylamide gel with MES running buffer by use of the NuPage system (Novex). H9/LAI supernatants were electrophoresed on a 12% Tris-glycine polyacrylamide gel (Novex). Proteins were electroblotted onto nitrocellulose and were detected with a monoclonal mouse antibody to HIV-1 p24 (Intracel). Statistics. The differences in the EC50 in different cell populations and under different conditions of infection were assessed by the two-tailed unpaired t test (StatView, Berkeley, CA). Results We first sought to determine the effect of protease inhibitors in M/M infected de novo with HIV-1Ba-L (i.e., treated with drugs prior to viral challenge) for comparison to M/M chronically infected with HIV-1 (figure 1). Consistent with previous experiments, 0.1 mM zidovudine induced Ç90% inhibition of viral replication in these acutely infected M/M. Under the same / 9d4c$$au34 06-29-98 13:04:48 jinfa 415 experimental conditions, all three protease inhibitors also showed potent activity. We then studied the activity of these protease inhibitors in chronically infected M/M. In these experiments, treatment with antiviral drugs was started at day 14, a time at which productive infection had already been established [46]. Zidovudine, at a concentration of 20 mM (Ç500-fold greater than its EC50 in M/M infected de novo by HIV-1) [47], did not substantially affect the production of HIV-1 p24 protein in chronically infected M/M (figure 2A). Zidovudine has little or no activity in cells once the HIV-1 provirus is found, and this finding provided evidence that by day 14, the majority of M/M in the cultures were infected by HIV-1. By contrast, all three protease inhibitors showed antiviral activity in chronically infected M/M. However, this activity was only partial; even at the highest concentrations tested, inhibition of virus in these cells never exceeded 95%. The effect of protease inhibitors on the production of mature viral proteins was also assessed by Western blot analysis on cell lysates of chronically infected M/M exposed to these drugs (figure 2B). The band corresponding to the mature HIV-1 p24 protein was substantially reduced in intensity in M/M samples treated with 1 mM saquinavir, 2 mM KNI-272, and 10 mM ritonavir, in parallel with the inhibition of HIV-1 p24 antigen production found in the supernatants of these cells by RIA (figure 2). Similar results were obtained by Western blot analysis on the supernatants of the same chronically infected M/M (data not shown). We then asked whether a similar pattern of activity in M/M could be obtained with another monocytotropic isolate of HIV-1. To this end, we tested the antiviral activity of KNI272 in M/M chronically infected with SRA1433, a monocytotropic isolate obtained from the cerebrospinal fluid of an HIV1 – infected child and expanded by one passage in primary M/M [43]. The EC50 determined for saquinavir using this strain was 0.62 mM, while the EC50 for KNI-272 was 0.95 mM. These results are quite close to the EC50 determined using HIV-1Ba-L in the same experiment: 0.55 mM for saquinavir and 0.91 mM for KNI-272. The kinetics of virus production under treatment with protease inhibitors in chronically infected M/M is depicted in figure 3. With the active doses of each drug, a decrease in virus production was detectable by day 1. Virus suppression was more pronounced by day 3, and starting from this time point, substantial inhibition of virus production was detected with 1 mM saquinavir, 2 mM KNI-272, or 10 mM ritonavir. The antiviral effect of each protease inhibitor in chronically infected M/M was sustained for at least up to 11 days after treatment if the drugs were maintained in culture throughout the whole experiment (table 1). However, when the drugs were removed from the cultures after consistent inhibition of viral replication had been achieved (e.g., after day 5 or day 10), virus production rapidly returned to the levels found in untreated M/M (results not shown). UC: J Infect 416 Perno et al. JID 1998;178 (August) Figure 1. Anti – HIV-1 activity of protease inhibitors in acutely infected macrophages. Drugs were added to macrophages 30 min before viral challenge and kept in culture throughout experiments. Virus production was determined by HIV-1 p24 RIA and results represent average of 2 experiments. Error bars show range of results. AZT, zidovudine. We wished to compare the results obtained using chronically infected M/M with those obtained using protease inhibitors in lymphocytes. To this end, we first assessed the antiviral activity of saquinavir, KNI-272, and ritonavir in acutely infected MT- 2 cells. A summary of these results, along with those in acutely and chronically infected M/M, is shown in table 2. As can be seen, the three protease inhibitors were quite active in MT-2 cells acutely infected with HIV-1LAI , with EC50s of 0.021, Figure 2. Effect of protease inhibitors on virus protein production in chronically infected macrophages. Macrophages were infected with HIV-1 and then treated with drugs once chronic infection was established. A, % of virus protein production in supernatants of treated versus untreated macrophages, assessed by HIV-1 p24 RIA. B, Western blot analysis of chronically infected macrophage cell lysates. Cellular extracts were prepared at same time (day 5 after beginning of treatment) as supernatants collected for HIV-1 p24 RIA. A, 0.25% dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) is final concentration found in wells containing macrophages treated with 10 mM protease inhibitors. AZT, zidovudine. / 9d4c$$au34 06-29-98 13:04:48 jinfa UC: J Infect Figure 3. Kinetics of HIV-1 p24 production in supernatants of chronically infected macrophages treated with no drug, protease inhibitors (saquinavir; KNI-272; ritonavir), zidovudine (AZT), or dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). On day 0, drugs were added to chronically infected macrophages. Data are from single experiment (each sample run in quadruplicate) representative of 3 different experiments. JID 1998;178 (August) / 9d4c$$au34 HIV Protease Inhibitors in Macrophages 06-29-98 13:04:48 jinfa UC: J Infect 417 418 Perno et al. Table 1. Effect of protease inhibitors in chronically infected monocytes/macrophages. HIV-1-p24 level, pg/mL (mean { SE) Drug treatment Control 1 mM saquinavir 10 mM KNI-272 10 mM ritonavir Day 5 26,932 8251 4427 5215 { { { { 2115 321 1114 653 Day 8 10,203 3198 2000 2397 { { { { Day 11 788 100 451 120 15,795 3797 2322 1622 { { { { 1012 1405 292 560 NOTE. Data are daily virus production. Drugs were kept in culture from day 0 for duration of experiment. Data represent 1 of 3 experiments. SE is variation among quadruplicates (controls in sextuplicates) within same experiment. 0.059, and 0.063 mM for saquinavir, KNI-272, and ritonavir, respectively (EC50 of zidovudine in the same cells was 0.010 mM). These results are in the range of those described by other authors using this cellular model [27] as well as in other T lymphocytic cell lines (such as H9 cells infected de novo by HIV-1) [35, 40]. These EC50s were Ç14- to 52-fold lower than the EC50 determined in chronically infected M/M (0.478, 0.844, and 3.275 mM for saquinavir, KNI-272, and ritonavir, respectively; P õ .01 for each comparison; table 2). Also, as can be seen in table 2, the EC50s of the drugs in acutely infected M/M were Ç7- to 26-fold lower than the EC50 determined in chronically infected M/M (P õ .05 for saquinavir and P õ .01 for KNI-272 and ritonavir). Thus, protease inhibitors were substantially less active in chronically infected M/M than in acutely infected lymphocyte cell lines or macrophages. We then assessed the antiviral activity of these drugs in H9/LAI, a CD4 T cell line chronically infected with HIV-1 (figure 4). As previously reported, 20 mM zidovudine gave no substantial inhibition of virus production in this cellular model [46]. By contrast, inhibition of virus production was detectable by day 3 after treatment with all of the protease inhibitors tested and was sustained at least for 5 days (figure 4). The EC50s of the protease inhibitors in H9/LAI cells were 0.048, 0.442, and 0.945 mM for saquinavir, KNI-272, and ritonavir, respectively (table 2). The EC50s were 9.9-, 1.9-, and 3.4-fold lower than those found in chronically infected M/M with saquinavir, KNI-272, and ritonavir, respectively (P õ .01 for KNI272 and P õ .05 for saquinavir and ritonavir). Moreover, ú99% inhibition of HIV-1 p24 production was reached in H9/LAI cells at concentrations of 0.2, 2, and 10 mM saquinavir, KNI-272, and ritonavir, respectively (figure 4); by contrast, this degree of inhibition of viral replication could not be achieved in chronically infected M/M, even at 5-fold-greater concentrations of saquinavir and KNI-272 (figure 2). It should be noted that these results were obtained with the same RIA used for chronically infected M/M, thus ruling out the possibility that the p24 detected in supernatants of M/M treated with the highest concentrations of protease inhibitors (up to 10 days after treatment; figures 2, 3) was simply a result / 9d4c$$au34 06-29-98 13:04:48 jinfa JID 1998;178 (August) of a cross-reaction of p55 with the anti-p24 antibody used in p24 RIA. Thus, these results indicated that the protease inhibitors were Ç2- to 10-fold less active in chronically infected M/M than in chronically infected lymphocytes (table 2). Also, while the results were not statistically significant for each drug, the drugs tended to be slightly (Ç1.9- to 2.4-fold) less active in acutely infected M/M than in acutely infected lymphocytes (table 2). The Western blots of lysates of H9/LAI cells treated with protease inhibitors are also shown in figure 4. When the cell lysates were examined, the inhibition of HIV-1 p24 antigen release into the supernatants correlated with the disappearance of the p24 band in the immunoblots. Similar results were obtained in Western blots of the supernatants of these H9/LAI cells treated with protease inhibitors (data not shown). Again, the concentrations of protease inhibitors found active in this assay with H9/LAI cells are lower than those effective in chronically infected M/M under the same experimental conditions (figure 2). Toxicity of these drugs in both M/M and lymphocytes was assessed in parallel with the above experiments. No evidence of cell killing was found in concentrations of protease inhibitors up to 10 mM. Neither toxicity nor substantial alteration of p24 production could be detected with 0.25% DMSO (figures 3, 4), which is the final concentration present in cell samples treated with 10 mM KNI-272 and ritonavir. Thus, the antiviral activity observed in these experiments can be attributed to the effect of these protease inhibitors. Discussion We report herein that HIV-1 production is inhibited in vitro by each of three different protease inhibitors in chronically inTable 2. Activity of protease inhibitors in monocytes/macrophages and lymphocyte lines. EC50, mM (mean { SE) Cells Monocytes/Macrophages Chronically infected Acutely infected Lymphocytes Chronically infected H9/LAI cells Acutely infected MT-2 cells Saquinavir KNI-272 Ritonavir 0.478 { 0.106 0.844 { 0.051 3.275 { 0.442 0.052 { 0.004* 0.113 { 0.005† 0.125 { 0.009† 0.048 { 0.001* 0.442 { 0.008† 0.945 { 0.435* 0.021 { 0.001† 0.059 { 0.003† 0.063 { 0.002† NOTE. For culture of chronically infected monocytes/macrophages, chronically infected lymphocytes, and acutely infected lymphocytes, EC50s were calculated using supernatants collected 5 days after introduction of drugs; for cultures of acutely infected monocytes/macrophages, EC50s were calculated using supernatants collected after 14 days (to allow for infection to become established). EC50s are based on 3 – 5 experiments each with 2 – 4 replicates. * P õ .05 by Student’s t test compared with chronically infected monocytes/ macrophages. † P õ .01 by Student’s t test compared with chronically infected monocytes/ macrophages. UC: J Infect JID 1998;178 (August) HIV Protease Inhibitors in Macrophages 419 Figure 4. Effect of protease inhibitors on viral protein production in chronically infected H9/LAI lymphocytic cells. Chronically infected H9/LAI cells were carefully washed at day 0 and treated with drugs until end of experiment. A, % of viral protein production in supernatants of treated versus untreated lymphocytes, assessed by HIV-1 p24 RIA. B, Western blot analysis of chronically infected H9/LAI cell lysates. Cellular extracts were prepared at same time (day 5 after beginning of treatment) as supernatants collected for HIV-1 p24 RIA A, 0.25% dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) is final concentration found in wells containing H9/LAI cells treated with 10 mM protease inhibitors. AZT, zidovudine. fected M/M at clinically relevant concentrations and that this effect correlates with the disruption of Gag and Gag-Pol polyprotein processing. This activity was observed with two separate monocytotropic isolates of HIV-1. However, the activity of protease inhibitors in chronically infected M/M is overall several-fold lower than that in chronically infected lymphocytes and substantially lower than that determined in acutely infected lymphocytes [2, 22–25, 27, 28]. Moreover, we could not achieve complete inhibition of HIV-1 p24 production in chronically infected M/M, even at the highest concentrations of drugs tested. This latter finding agrees with recently published results by Pretzer et al. [48] determined using the protease inhibitor L-589,502 in M/M exposed to HIV 4 days earlier. Thus, for several protease inhibitors, relatively high concentrations are required to suppress HIV-1 production by chronically infected M/M, and such cells may thus be relatively more likely to escape complete HIV-1 suppression in patients receiving these drugs. It should be noted that antiviral assays involving acutely infected cells reflect a drug effect amplified over several cycles of viral replication, while the results of those involving chronically infected cells do not reflect such an amplification (because all cells are already infected). This may account for much of the difference between the assays involving acutely and chronically infected cells in the present work. At the same time, the finding of the relatively low activity of protease inhibitors in chronically infected M/M has potential clinical applicability, as productively infected M/M are found in HIV-infected pa- / 9d4c$$au34 06-29-98 13:04:48 jinfa tients and as these cells are efficient at infecting other susceptible cells [31, 49 – 51]. It is noteworthy that the protease inhibitors were found to be less active in chronically infected M/M than in chronically infected lymphocytes. In both cases, the assays involve the effects of drugs on virus production from cells already infected with HIV-1, suggesting that this may reflect a true difference between the cell types. It is possible that the monocytotropic isolates used in our experiments are intrinsically less sensitive than lymphocytotropic isolates to protease inhibitors. Previous experiments, however, have shown that reverse transcriptase inhibitors are equally active in macrophages infected with either lymphocytotropic or monocytotropic isolates of HIV-1 [44, 52]. In addition, the amino acid sequences of both the reverse transcriptase and the protease of HIV-1Ba-L are nearly identical to that of the corresponding proteins of all wild type lymphocytotropic isolates studied, including HIV-1LAI [53, 54]. Finally, in a preliminary experiment, we have found that the EC50 of saquinavir against HIV-1Ba-L in acutely infected primary lymphocytes is Ç0.01 mM (unpublished data), which is quite similar to its activity in MT-2 cells acutely infected with HIV-1LAI (table 2). Additional work needs to be done to fully clarify this point, yet the current data suggest that variation in the sensitivity of the HIV-1 isolates is not a major factor affecting their sensitivity to protease inhibitors. Another possible contributing factor to these results is that M/M produce substantially more virus progeny in culture than UC: J Infect 420 Perno et al. do H9/LAI cells, on the basis of the amount of HIV-1 p24 released by untreated cells. Indeed, as shown in table 1 and figure 2, between 10,000 and 35,000 pg/mL HIV-1 p24 protein is produced daily at steady state by each well containing Ç5 1 104 M/M (the M/M do not proliferate under these culture conditions). Similar virus production by H9/LAI cells (an actively replicating cell line) is achieved only in wells containing Ç3 1 105 cells (data not shown). Also, HIV virions can accumulate in chronically infected M/M [55, 56]. Thus, there is evidence that the concentrations of Gag and Gag-Pol polyproteins in chronically infected M/M are higher than in chronically infected lymphocytes. This may reduce the relative effectiveness of protease inhibitors, similar to the relatively reduced effectiveness of reverse transcriptase inhibitors found in experiments involving higher virus inocula [57]. Another possible explanation for the lower activity of protease inhibitors in chronically infected M/M may be related to differences in the redox states of these cells. Macrophages are often under oxidative stress after viral infection [58 – 60], and this may, in turn, affect the activity of the HIV-1 protease. Under such conditions, the HIV-1 protease may become glutathionylated in such a way as to increase protease activity [61, 62]. Such active forms of protease may be less sensitive to protease inhibitors, and this may conceivably account for the relatively lower activity of protease inhibitors in these cells. These forms of the protease would more likely be present in chronically infected macrophages than lymphocytes, and exposure of infected cells to reactive oxygen species may lead to activation of HIV-1 replication [63]. Future studies will be required to address this point. Yet another possibility is that cellular enzymes within macrophages can degrade protease inhibitors, lowering their relative concentration within those cells. The EC50 of the protease inhibitors for chronically infected M/M are at concentrations that are attainable in patients receiving these drugs. In the case of ritonavir, which has good oral bioavailability, peak plasma levels of Ç15.5 mM and trough levels of Ç3.6 mM are attained under treatment with the currently approved regimen of 600 mg twice daily [64]. Saquinavir is not absorbed as well orally, and at the approved dose of 600 mg three times daily, peak plasma levels are generally below 1 mM [65]. However, peak plasma saquinavir levels of 1.8 mM can be attained if patients are given 4-fold-higher doses, and higher saquinavir plasma levels can also be attained if the drug is coadministered with ritonavir [10, 66]. Finally, peak plasma KNI-272 levels of Ç3.5 mM are obtained after oral doses of 4 mg/kg [34]. Thus, the peak plasma levels of these drugs are only about two to three times higher than the EC50 in chronically infected M/M, and trough levels fall below the EC50. Also, as noted above, these drugs are highly bound to plasma proteins (especially a1-acid glycoprotein), and the drugs are thus somewhat less active in patients than predicted by the assays here, which use 20% fetal calf serum [67, 68]. Finally, the development of even minimal resistance to these drugs may / 9d4c$$au34 06-29-98 13:04:48 jinfa JID 1998;178 (August) result in the peak levels being lower then the EC50. Thus, M/M may be a vulnerable point for virus escape in patients taking these drugs, particularly in cases of poor drug compliance or administration of low drug doses. Another issue that should be considered is that M/M are the main target for HIV-1 in the central nervous system [30, 31]. Although protease inhibitors are lipophilic drugs, they may not effectively penetrate the blood-brain barrier, and their levels in the cerebrospinal fluid may be relatively low [69]. The juxtaposition of these relatively low drug levels with the relatively high drug levels required to completely suppress HIV-1 replication in chronically infected M/M suggests that control of HIV1 in the central nervous system by protease inhibitors may not be as complete as in other parts of the body. Protease inhibitors are now recommended for use in combination with reverse transcriptase inhibitors [11], which inhibit acute infection of M/M and penetrate the central nervous system to various degrees [17, 44]. However, some nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors have relatively poor penetration through the bloodbrain barrier [70], and more important, they have little or no activity in M/M already infected with HIV-1. Therefore, it is conceivable that the central nervous system may serve as a sequestered site in which continued viral replication may occur, thus thwarting the goal of complete eradication of HIV-1 and potentially permitting the development of resistant virus [71]. In summary, while the HIV-1 protease inhibitors tested are active in chronically infected M/M, the EC50s are somewhat higher than in chronically infected lymphocytes. Anti – HIV-1 therapy has evolved to the point at which a principal goal is to suppress HIV-1 replication as completely as possible, ideally to below the levels of detection [11]. 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