Chabot D J, Zhang P F, Quinnan G V, Broder C C
Departments of Microbiology and Immunology, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland 20814-4799, USA.
J Virol. 1999 Aug;73(8):6598-609. doi: 10.1128/JVI.73.8.6598-6609.1999.
CXCR4 is a chemokine receptor and a coreceptor for T-cell-line-tropic (X4) and dual-tropic (R5X4) human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) isolates. Cells coexpressing CXCR4 and CD4 will fuse with appropriate HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein (Env)-expressing cells. The delineation of the critical regions involved in the interactions within the Env-CD4-coreceptor complex are presently under intensive investigation, and the use of chimeras of coreceptor molecules has provided valuable information. To define these regions in greater detail, we have employed a strategy involving alanine-scanning mutagenesis of the extracellular domains of CXCR4 coupled with a highly sensitive reporter gene assay for HIV-1 Env-mediated membrane fusion. Using a panel of 41 different CXCR4 mutants, we have identified several charged residues that appear important for coreceptor activity for X4 Envs; the mutations E15A (in which the glutamic acid residue at position 15 is replaced by alanine) and E32A in the N terminus, D97A in extracellular loop 1 (ecl-1), and R188A in ecl-2 impaired coreceptor activity for X4 and R5X4 Envs. In addition, substitution of alanine for any of the four extracellular cysteines alone resulted in conformational changes of various degrees, while mutants with paired cysteine deletions partially retained their structure. Our data support the notion that all four cysteines are involved in disulfide bond formation. We have also identified substitutions which greatly enhance or convert CXCR4's coreceptor activity to support R5 Env-mediated fusion (N11A, R30A, D187A, and D193A), and together our data suggest the presence of conserved extracellular elements, common to both CXCR4 and CCR5, involved in their coreceptor activities. These data will help us to better detail the CXCR4 structural requirements exhibited by different HIV-1 strains and will direct further mutagenesis efforts aimed at better defining the domains in CXCR4 involved in the HIV-1 Env-mediated fusion process.
CXCR4是一种趋化因子受体,也是T细胞嗜性(X4)和双嗜性(R5X4)1型人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV-1)分离株的共受体。共表达CXCR4和CD4的细胞会与表达适当HIV-1包膜糖蛋白(Env)的细胞融合。目前正在深入研究Env-CD4-共受体复合物内相互作用所涉及的关键区域,共受体分子嵌合体的使用提供了有价值的信息。为了更详细地定义这些区域,我们采用了一种策略,即对CXCR4的胞外结构域进行丙氨酸扫描诱变,并结合用于HIV-1 Env介导的膜融合的高灵敏度报告基因检测。使用一组41种不同的CXCR4突变体,我们鉴定出了几个对X4 Env的共受体活性似乎很重要的带电荷残基;N端的E15A(第15位的谷氨酸残基被丙氨酸取代)和E32A突变、胞外环1(ecl-1)中的D97A以及ecl-2中的R188A损害了对X4和R5X4 Env的共受体活性。此外,单独将丙氨酸替代四个胞外半胱氨酸中的任何一个都会导致不同程度的构象变化,而具有成对半胱氨酸缺失的突变体部分保留了其结构。我们的数据支持所有四个半胱氨酸都参与二硫键形成的观点。我们还鉴定出了极大增强或转换CXCR4的共受体活性以支持R5 Env介导的融合的替代突变(N11A、R30A、D187A和D193A),我们的数据共同表明存在CXCR4和CCR5共有的保守胞外元件,参与它们的共受体活性。这些数据将有助于我们更详细地了解不同HIV-1毒株所表现出的CXCR4结构要求,并将指导进一步的诱变工作,以更好地定义CXCR4中参与HIV-1 Env介导的融合过程的结构域。