AI Article Synopsis

  • The V3 loop of HIV-1’s gp120 protein is crucial for the virus's ability to enter cells by interacting with coreceptors CCR5 and CXCR4, and this interaction may be influenced by the electrostatic properties of the loop.
  • The study found that while most HIV-1 subtypes have a net charge of +3, the specific spatial distribution of their electrostatic potentials plays a significant role in determining binding affinity and infectivity, highlighting the complexity of these interactions.
  • The research suggests that understanding these spatial electrostatic distributions, in addition to sequence and net charge, could improve insights into receptor recognition and facilitate the development of targeted HIV treatments.

Article Abstract

Background: The V3 loop of the glycoprotein gp120 of HIV-1 plays an important role in viral entry into cells by utilizing as coreceptor CCR5 or CXCR4, and is implicated in the phenotypic tropisms of HIV viruses. It has been hypothesized that the interaction between the V3 loop and CCR5 or CXCR4 is mediated by electrostatics. We have performed hierarchical clustering analysis of the spatial distributions of electrostatic potentials and charges of V3 loop structures containing consensus sequences of HIV-1 subtypes.

Results: Although the majority of consensus sequences have a net charge of +3, the spatial distribution of their electrostatic potentials and charges may be a discriminating factor for binding and infectivity. This is demonstrated by the formation of several small subclusters, within major clusters, which indicates common origin but distinct spatial details of electrostatic properties. Some of this information may be present, in a coarse manner, in clustering of sequences, but the spatial details are largely lost. We show the effect of ionic strength on clustering of electrostatic potentials, information that is not present in clustering of charges or sequences. We also make correlations between clustering of electrostatic potentials and net charge, coreceptor selectivity, global prevalence, and geographic distribution. Finally, we interpret coreceptor selectivity based on the N6X7T8|S8X9 sequence glycosylation motif, the specific positive charge location according to the 11/24/25 rule, and the overall charge and electrostatic potential distribution.

Conclusions: We propose that in addition to the sequence and the net charge of the V3 loop of each subtype, the spatial distributions of electrostatic potentials and charges may also be important factors for receptor recognition and binding and subsequent viral entry into cells. This implies that the overall electrostatic potential is responsible for long-range recognition of the V3 loop with coreceptors CCR5/CXCR4, whereas the charge distribution contributes to the specific short-range interactions responsible for the formation of the bound complex. We also propose a scheme for coreceptor selectivity based on the sequence glycosylation motif, the 11/24/25 rule, and net charge.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3295656PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/2046-1682-5-3DOI Listing

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