Department of Immunology and Microbial Science, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2010 May 18;5(5):e10689. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0010689.
The chemokine receptor CXCR4 is shared by primary and laboratory-adapted strains of feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) for viral entry. Our previous studies implicated a contiguous nine-amino-acid region of the V3 loop of the FIV envelope surface as important in CXCR4 binding and virus entry. The binding is specific for CXCR4 since it can be inhibited by AMD3100, a selective CXCR4 inhibitor. Additional site-directed mutagenesis was used to further reveal the key residues. Binding studies indicated that basic residues R395, K397, R399 as well as N398 are critical for CXCR4 binding. The effect of other amino acid residues on receptor binding depends on the type of amino acid residue substituted. The binding study results were confirmed on human CXCR4-expressing SupT1 cells and correlated with entry efficiency using a virus entry assay. Amino acid residues critical for CXCR4 are not critical for interactions with the primary binding receptor CD134, which has an equivalent role as CD4 for HIV-1 binding. The ELISA results show that W394 and W400 are crucial for the recognition by neutralizing anti-V3 antibodies. Since certain strains of HIV-1 also use CXCR4 as the entry receptor, the findings make the feline model attractive for development of broad-based entry antagonists and for study of the molecular mechanism of receptor/virus interactions.
趋化因子受体 CXCR4 是猫免疫缺陷病毒 (FIV) 的原始和实验室适应株用于病毒进入的共受体。我们之前的研究表明,FIV 包膜表面的 V3 环中的一个连续的九个氨基酸区域在 CXCR4 结合和病毒进入中很重要。这种结合是特异性的,因为它可以被 AMD3100 抑制,AMD3100 是一种选择性的 CXCR4 抑制剂。进一步的定点突变研究揭示了关键残基。结合研究表明,碱性残基 R395、K397、R399 以及 N398 对于 CXCR4 的结合至关重要。其他氨基酸残基对受体结合的影响取决于取代的氨基酸残基的类型。结合研究结果在表达人 CXCR4 的 SupT1 细胞上得到了证实,并通过病毒进入测定与进入效率相关。对于 CXCR4 结合至关重要的氨基酸残基对于与主要结合受体 CD134 的相互作用并不重要,CD134 在 HIV-1 结合中具有与 CD4 相当的作用。ELISA 结果表明,W394 和 W400 对于中和抗 V3 抗体的识别至关重要。由于某些 HIV-1 株也使用 CXCR4 作为进入受体,因此这些发现使得猫模型成为开发广泛的进入拮抗剂和研究受体/病毒相互作用的分子机制的有吸引力的模型。