Brelot A, Heveker N, Adema K, Hosie M J, Willett B, Alizon M
INSERM U.332, Institut Cochin de Génétique Moléculaire, 75014 Paris, France.
J Virol. 1999 Apr;73(4):2576-86. doi: 10.1128/JVI.73.4.2576-2586.1999.
CCR5 and CXCR4 are the principal CD4-associated coreceptors used by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). CXCR4 is also a receptor for the feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV). The rat CXCR4 cannot mediate infection by HIV-1NDK or by FIVPET (both cell line-adapted strains) because of sequence differences with human CXCR4 in the second extracellular loop (ECL2). Here we made similar observations for HIV-189.6 (a strain also using CCR5) and for a primary HIV-1 isolate. It showed the role of ECL2 in the coreceptor activity of CXCR4 for different types of HIV-1 strains. By exchanging ECL2 residues between human and rat CXCR4, we found that several amino acid differences contributed to the inactivity of the rat CXCR4 toward HIV-189.6. In contrast, its inactivity toward HIV-1NDK seemed principally due to a serine at position 193 instead of to an aspartic acid (Asp193) in human CXCR4. Likewise, a mutation of Asp187 prevented usage of CXCR4 by FIVPET. Different mutations of Asp193, including its replacement by a glutamic acid, markedly reduced or suppressed the activity of CXCR4 for HIV-1NDK infection, indicating that the negative charge was not the only requirement. Mutations of Asp193 and of arginine residues (Arg183 and Arg188) of CXCR4 reduced the efficiency of HIV-1 infection for all HIV-1 strains tested. Other ECL2 mutations tested had strain-specific effects or no apparent effect on HIV-1 infection. The ECL2 mutants allowed us to identify residues contributing to the epitope of the 12G5 monoclonal antibody. Overall, residues with different charges and interspersed in ECL2 seem to participate in the coreceptor activity of CXCR4. This suggests that a conformational rather than linear epitope of ECL2 contributes to the HIV-1 binding site. However, certain HIV-1 and FIV strains seem to require the presence of a particular ECL2 residue.
CCR5和CXCR4是1型人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV-1)使用的主要CD4相关共受体。CXCR4也是猫免疫缺陷病毒(FIV)的受体。由于大鼠CXCR4与人类CXCR4在第二个细胞外环(ECL2)存在序列差异,它不能介导HIV-1NDK或FIVPET(两种细胞系适应株)的感染。在这里,我们对HIV-189.6(一种也使用CCR5的毒株)和一株原发性HIV-1分离株进行了类似观察。结果显示了ECL2在CXCR4对不同类型HIV-1毒株的共受体活性中的作用。通过交换人类和大鼠CXCR4之间的ECL2残基,我们发现几个氨基酸差异导致大鼠CXCR4对HIV-189.6无活性。相比之下,其对HIV-1NDK无活性似乎主要是由于第193位的丝氨酸,而不是人类CXCR4中的天冬氨酸(Asp193)。同样,Asp187的突变阻止了FIVPET对CXCR4的利用。Asp193的不同突变,包括用谷氨酸替代,显著降低或抑制了CXCR4对HIV-1NDK感染的活性,这表明负电荷不是唯一的必要条件。CXCR4的Asp193和精氨酸残基(Arg183和Arg188)的突变降低了所有测试HIV-1毒株的HIV-1感染效率。测试的其他ECL2突变对HIV-1感染具有毒株特异性影响或无明显影响。这些ECL2突变体使我们能够鉴定出有助于12G5单克隆抗体表位的残基。总体而言,电荷不同且散布在ECL2中的残基似乎参与了CXCR4的共受体活性。这表明ECL2的构象而非线性表位有助于HIV-1结合位点。然而,某些HIV-1和FIV毒株似乎需要特定ECL2残基的存在。