Cost-effective high-speed, three-dimensional live-cell imaging of HIV-1 transfer at the T cell virological synapse

The availability of cost-effective, highly portable, and easy to use high-resolution live-cell imaging systems could present a significant technological break-through in challenging environments, such as high-level biosafety laboratories or sites where new viral outbreaks are suspected. We describe...

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Veröffentlicht in:iScience 2022-11, Vol.25 (11), p.105468-105468, Article 105468
Hauptverfasser: Sandmeyer, Alice, Wang, Lili, Hübner, Wolfgang, Müller, Marcel, Chen, Benjamin K., Huser, Thomas
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The availability of cost-effective, highly portable, and easy to use high-resolution live-cell imaging systems could present a significant technological break-through in challenging environments, such as high-level biosafety laboratories or sites where new viral outbreaks are suspected. We describe and demonstrate a cost-effective high-speed fluorescence microscope enabling the live tracking of virus particles across virological synapses that form between infected and uninfected T cells. The dynamics of HIV-1 proteins studied at the cellular level and the formation of virological synapses in living T cells reveals mechanisms by which cell-cell interactions facilitate infection between immune cells. Dual-color 3D fluorescence deconvolution microscopy of HIV-1 particles at frames rates of 100 frames per second allows us to follow the transfer of HIV-1 particles across the T cell virological synapse between living T cells. We also confirm the successful transfer of virus by imaging T cell samples fixed at specific time points during cell-cell virus transfer by super-resolution structured illumination microscopy. [Display omitted] •A cost-effective, high-speed 3D fluorescence microscope was developed•Three-dimensional fluorescence micrographs of immune cells were collected•Transfer of HIV-1 between infected and uninfected T cells was observed•Super-resolution SIM imaging revealed HIV-1 particles in immunological synapses Optical imaging; Virology
ISSN:2589-0042
2589-0042
DOI:10.1016/j.isci.2022.105468