Resumen:
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) R5 isolates that predominantly use CCR5 as a coreceptor are
frequently described as macrophage tropic. Here, we compare macrophage tropism conferred by HIV-1 R5
envelopes that were derived directly by PCR from patient tissue. This approach avoids potentially selective
culture protocols used in virus isolation. Envelopes were amplified (i) from blood and semen of adult patients
and (ii) from plasma of pediatric patients. The phenotypes of these envelopes were compared to those conferred
by an extended panel of envelopes derived from brain and lymph node that we reported previously. Our results
show that R5 envelopes vary by up to 1,000-fold in their capacity to confer infection of primary macrophages.
Highly macrophage-tropic envelopes were predominate in brain but were infrequent in semen, blood, and
lymph node samples. We also confirmed that the presence of N283 in the C2 CD4 binding site of gp120 is
associated with HIV-1 envelopes from the brain but absent from macrophage-tropic envelopes amplified from
blood and semen. Finally, we compared infection of macrophages, CD4 T cells, and peripheral blood
mononuclear cells (PBMCs) conferred by macrophage-tropic and non-macrophage-tropic envelopes in the
context of full-length replication competent viral clones. Non-macrophage-tropic envelopes conferred low-level
infection of macrophages yet infected CD4 T cells and PBMCs as efficiently as highly macrophage-tropic
brain envelopes. The lack of macrophage tropism for the majority of the envelopes amplified from lymph node,
blood, and semen is striking and contrasts with the current consensus that R5 primary isolates are generally
macrophage tropic. The extensive variation in R5 tropism reported here is likely to have an important impact
on pathogenesis and on the capacity of HIV-1 to transmit