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HIV-1-induced cell fusion is mediated by multiple regions within both the viral envelope and the CCR-5 co-receptor. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The human CCR-5 receptor acts as a co-receptor for various strains of HIV-1, but its mouse counterpart is inactive.
  • Researchers used chimeric receptor molecules to investigate three specific extracellular domains in human CCR-5 that differ from those in mouse CCR-5, finding that all three domains can interact with HIV-1 but with varying requirements depending on the strain.
  • The study reveals that different HIV-1 strains, such as ADA, BaL, and 89.6, have unique needs for human extracellular sequences to effectively use the CCR-5 receptor, highlighting the complex nature of HIV-1 and CCR-5 interactions.

Article Abstract

Although the human hCCR-5 chemokine receptor can serve as a co-receptor for both M-tropic (ADA and BaL) and dual-tropic (89.6) strains of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), the closely related mouse mCCR-5 homolog is inactive. We used chimeric hCCR-5-mCCR-5 receptor molecules to examine the functional importance of the three extracellular domains of hCCR-5 that differ in sequence from their mCCR-5 equivalents. While this analysis revealed that all three of these extracellular domains could participate in the functional interaction with HIV-1 envelope, clear differences were observed when different HIV-1 strains were analyzed. Thus, while the ADA HIV-1 isolate could effectively utilize chimeric human-mouse CCR-5 chimeras containing any single human extracellular domain, the BaL isolate required any two human extracellular sequences while the 89.6 isolate would only interact effectively with chimeras containing all three human extracellular sequences. Further analysis using hybrid HIV-1 envelope proteins showed that the difference in co-receptor specificity displayed by the ADA and BaL isolates was due partly to a single amino acid change in the V3 loop, although this interaction was clearly also modulated by other envelope domains. Overall, these data indicate that the interaction between HIV-1 envelope and CCR-5 is not only complex but also subject to marked, HIV-1 isolate-dependent variation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1169871PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/emboj/16.10.2599DOI Listing

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