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HIV-2 interaction with cell coreceptors: amino acids within the V1/V2 region of viral envelope are determinant for CCR8, CCR5 and CXCR4 usage
Authors
A Harris
A Jinno
+116 more
A McKnight
A McKnight
A Morner
A Morner
A Ohagen
A Pinter
A Singh
AA Nabatov
AL Edinger
B Labrosse
B Lee
B Lee
B Visseaux
BF Haynes
BF Keele
C Guillon
C Jiang
CC Broder
CJ Saunders
D Lyumkis
D Soler
DR Briggs
E Bjorling
E Bjorling
EA Berger
EJ Platt
F Clavel
F de Wolf
G Alkhatib
G Alkhatib
G Ozkaya Sahin
G Pollakis
G Simmons
G Zanetti
H Deng
HK Deng
HL Tiffany
HY Liu
I Goya
J Albert
J Auwerx
J Cao
J Isaacman-Beck
J Liu
J Rucker
J-C Grivel
J-P Julien
JD Reeves
JD Reeves
JM Azevedo-Pereira
JM Azevedo-Pereira
JM Azevedo-Pereira
JM Azevedo-Pereira
JM Marcelino
José Miguel Azevedo-Pereira
JP Moore
JR Taylor
L Gharu
L Gharu
L Stamatatos
L Xiao
M Calado
MA Ryan-Graham
Maria Manuel Lopes
Marta Calado
MM Laakso
MW Cho
N Shimizu
N Sol
NE Riddick
NH Lin
O Lambotte
P Delobel
P Rusert
P Zhu
P Zhu
PD Kwong
PR Clapham
PR Gorry
Q Hu
Q Santos-Costa
Q Santos-Costa
Quirina Santos-Costa
R Bron
R Horuk
R Kong
RA Fouchier
RJ Smyth
RS Roos
RT Wyatt
RW Doms
S Gartner
S Islam
S Kulkarni
S Lee
S Matsushita
S Pohlmann
SG Deeks
SJ Willey
SJ Willey
SJD Neil
SM Owen
STC Elliott
T Cardozo
T Cilliers
T Cilliers
TA White
TI De Silva
TL Hoffman
TL Hoffman
U O’Doherty
Y Isaka
Y Shi
Y Zhang
YJ Zhang
Z Chen
Publication date
1 January 2014
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
Cite
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on
PubMed
Abstract
© 2014 Santos-Costa et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.Background: Human immunodeficiency virus 1 and 2 (HIV-1 and HIV-2) use cellular receptors in distinct ways. Besides a more promiscuous usage of coreceptors by HIV-2 and a more frequent detection of CD4-independent HIV-2 isolates, we have previously identified two HIV-2 isolates (HIV-2MIC97 and HIV-2MJC97) that do not use the two major HIV coreceptors: CCR5 and CXCR4. All these features suggest that in HIV-2 the Env glycoprotein subunits may have a different structural organization enabling distinct - although probably less efficient - interactions with cellular receptors. Results: By infectivity assays using GHOST cell line expressing CD4 and CCR8 and blocking experiments using CCR8-specific ligand, I-309, we show that efficient replication of HIV-2MIC97 and HIV-2MJC97 requires the presence of CCR8 at plasma cell membrane. Additionally, we disclosed the determinants of chemokine receptor usage at the molecular level, and deciphered the amino acids involved in the usage of CCR8 (R8 phenotype) and in the switch from CCR8 to CCR5 or to CCR5/CXCR4 usage (R5 or R5X4 phenotype). The data obtained from site-directed mutagenesis clearly indicates that the main genetic determinants of coreceptor tropism are located within the V1/V2 region of Env surface glycoprotein of these two viruses. Conclusions: We conclude that a viral population able to use CCR8 and unable to infect CCR5 or CXCR4-positive cells, may exist in some HIV-2 infected individuals during an undefined time period, in the course of the asymptomatic stage of infection. This suggests that in vivo alternate molecules might contribute to HIV infection of natural target cells, at least under certain circumstances. Furthermore we provide direct and unequivocal evidence that the usage of CCR8 and the switch from R8 to R5 or R5X4 phenotype is determined by amino acids located in the base and tip of V1 and V2 loops of HIV-2 Env surface glycoprotein.This work was supported by grants from: Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia (FCT; PPCDT/SAU-IMI/55726/2004); Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia and Ministério da Saúde de Portugal (VIH/SAU/0006/2011); and from Gilead Sciences Portugal (Programa Gilead Génese).info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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