Abstract
Four strains of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) manifest consistent differences in biologic behavior after infection of the X50-7 line of human umbilical cord lymphocytes immortalized by Epstein-Barr virus (EBV). Some dilutions of the first strain examined, human T-cell lymphotropic virus type III B, which is derived from a pool of patient isolates propagated in H9 cells, caused transient cytopathic effects (CPE) followed by recovery of a subpopulation of X50-7 cells which became virus carrier cultures. Other dilutions of the same virus stock completely lysed X50-7 cells. Two other strains, RF2 and YW, both from individual patients with acquired immune deficiency syndrome, always induced complete cytolysis of X50-7 cells at all dilutions which infected the cells. However, RF2 did establish persistent infection of H9 cells. A fourth strain, PH1-MN, from a child with acquired immune deficiency syndrome-related complex, induced only transient CPE in X50-7 and H9 cells, which thereafter always recovered to form carrier cultures. For all four strains, the dilutions of HIV stocks which caused CPE corresponded to dilutions which resulted in the detection of HIV polypeptides by immunoblot. Cytolysis in HIV-infected X50-7 cells was accompanied by a decrease in the amount of EBV nuclear antigen; however, HIV infection did not induce EBV replication. Thus CPE in X50-7 cells is due to replication of HIV per se and not to activation of EBV. The observations indicate that there are differences in the cytolytic properties of HIVs and that these differences are influenced by the target cell.