Abstract
The human immunodefiency virus (HIV) uses the human CD4 glycoprotein as a receptor for infection of susceptible cells. Cells expressing a series of mutated forms of the CD4 gene have shown a variability in their ability to support replication of three HIV type 1 (HIV-1) and three HIV-2 strains. Moreover, when different stages of virus production were examined by a variety of assays, a consistent delay was observed in all cell lines containing CD4 mutants compared with those with intact full-length CD4. Cells expressing the CD4.415 mutant (modified at the serine 415 corresponding to a phosphorylation site of the cytoplasmic domain) showed only a minimal effect on virus replication. Cells expressing CD4.403 and CD4.401 mutants (lacking the whole cytoplasmic domain) manifested a moderate delay in production of virus progeny. The most substantial effect on HIV replication was observed in cells expressing a chimeric hybrid containing sequences corresponding to the first 177 residues of the N-terminal CD4 fused to CD8 sequences encoding the hinge, transmembrane, and cytoplasmic domains of the human CD8. Furthermore, in a cell-to-cell contact assay, fusion was absent when the CD4 proximal membrane domain was replaced by the CD8 counterpart. In addition, a strong correlation between the down-modulation of the surface CD4 and HIV expression was observed. These observations suggest that in addition to the known binding region, other domains of CD4 could play an important role in regulating HIV entry of cells.
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