Title of article :
HIV-Induced Syncytia in Peripheral Blood Cell Cultures Crawl by Extending Giant Pseudopods
Author/Authors :
Shutt، نويسنده , , Damon C. and Stapleton، نويسنده , , Jack T. and Kennedy، نويسنده , , Ronald C. and Soll، نويسنده , , David R.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1995
Pages :
14
From page :
261
To page :
274
Abstract :
It was previously demonstrated that HIV-induced syncytia of the immortalized T cell line SupT1 reorganize their cytoskeleton and form a spherical supernuclear complex, thus mimicking the organization, polarity, and morphology of a single SupT1 cell. Then, through extension of a single, giant pseudopod, these syncytia, which grow to more than 100 times the volume of a single SupT1 cell, translocate along a substratum. To verify that syncytium motility is not peculiar to the SupT1 cell line, we have analyzed the cytoskeletal organization and motile capabilities of HIV-induced syncytia formed in peripheral blood cell cultures containing more than 90% CD4-positive cells. The results demonstrate that although peripheral blood T cells differ from SupT1 cells in size and morphology, they are continuously motile and translocate along a substratum in a manner quite similar to that of SupT1 cells, and peripheral blood T cell syncytia induced by HIV-1LAI as well as two additional clinical isolates translocate by the extension of a giant anterior pseudopod in a fashion indistinguishable from that of HIV-induced SupT1 syncytia. Together, these results support the generalization that HIV-induced T cell syncytia are motile.
Journal title :
Cellular Immunology
Serial Year :
1995
Journal title :
Cellular Immunology
Record number :
1851239
Link To Document :
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