Differential Effects of a Hydrophobic Tripeptide on Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1)-Induced Syncytium Formation and Viral Infectivity

1995 ◽  
Vol 208 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Konopka ◽  
E. Pretzer ◽  
N. Duzgunes
1993 ◽  
Vol 177 (4) ◽  
pp. 949-954 ◽  
Author(s):  
J H Simon ◽  
C Somoza ◽  
G A Schockmel ◽  
M Collin ◽  
S J Davis ◽  
...  

CD4 is the primary receptor for the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). Early mutational studies implicated a number of residues of CD4, centered in the region 41-59, in binding to gp120. However, further mutational analyses, together with studies using inhibitory antibodies or CD4-derived peptides, have suggested that other regions of CD4 are also involved in binding or postbinding events during infection. To resolve these ambiguities, we used rat CD4 mutants in which particular regions were replaced with the corresponding sequence of human CD4. We have previously shown that some of these are able to bind HIV-1 gp120, and here we test their ability to act as functional receptors. We find that the presence of human CD4 residues 33-62 is enough to confer efficient receptor function to rat CD4, and we conclude that it is unlikely that regions of CD4 outside this sequence are involved in specific interactions with HIV-1 during either infection or syncytium formation.


2001 ◽  
Vol 75 (8) ◽  
pp. 3568-3580 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julio Martı́n ◽  
Celia C. LaBranche ◽  
Francisco González-Scarano

ABSTRACT Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infects and induces syncytium formation in microglial cells from the central nervous system (CNS). A primary isolate (HIV-1BORI) was sequentially passaged in cultured microglia, and the isolate recovered (HIV-1BORI-15) showed high levels of fusion and replicated more efficiently in microglia (J. M. Strizki, A. V. Albright, H. Sheng, M. O'Connor, L. Perrin, and F. González-Scarano, J. Virol. 70:7654–7662, 1996). The parent and adapted viruses used CCR5 as coreceptor. Recombinant viruses demonstrated that the syncytium-inducing phenotype was associated with four amino acid differences in the V1/V2 region of the viral gp120 (J. T. C. Shieh, J. Martin, G. Baltuch, M. H. Malim, and F. González-Scarano, J. Virol. 74:693–701, 2000). We produced luciferase-reporter, env-pseudotyped viruses using plasmids containing env sequences from HIV-1BORI, HIV-1BORI-15, and the V1/V2 region of HIV-1BORI-15 in the context of HIV-1BORI env (named rBORI, rB15, and rV1V2, respectively). The pseudotypes were used to infect cells expressing various amounts of CD4 and CCR5 on the surface. In contrast to the parent recombinant, the rB15 and rV1V2 pseudotypes retained their infectability in cells expressing low levels of CD4 independent of the levels of CCR5, and they infected cells expressing CD4 with a chimeric coreceptor containing the third extracellular loop of CCR2b in the context of CCR5 or a CCR5 Δ4 amino-terminal deletion mutant. The VH-rB15 and VH-rV1V2 recombinant viruses were more sensitive to neutralization by a panel of HIV-positive sera than was VH-rBORI. Interestingly, the CD4-induced 17b epitope on gp120 was more accessible in the rB15 and rV1V2 pseudotypes than in rBORI, even before CD4 binding, and concomitantly, the rB15 and rV1V2 pseudotypes were more sensitive to neutralization with the human 17b monoclonal antibody. Adaptation to growth in microglia—cells that have reduced expression of CD4 in comparison with other cell types—appears to be associated with changes in gp120 that modify its ability to utilize CD4 and CCR5. Changes in the availability of the 17b epitope indicate that these affect conformation. These results imply that the process of adaptation to certain tissue types such as the CNS directly affects the interaction of HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins with cell surface components and with humoral immune responses.


2006 ◽  
Vol 80 (23) ◽  
pp. 11710-11722 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fei Guo ◽  
Shan Cen ◽  
Meijuan Niu ◽  
Jenan Saadatmand ◽  
Lawrence Kleiman

ABSTRACT Cells are categorized as being permissive or nonpermissive according to their ability to produce infectious human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) lacking the viral protein Vif. Nonpermissive cells express the human cytidine deaminase APOBEC3G (hA3G), and Vif has been shown to bind to APOBEC3G and facilitate its degradation. Vif-negative HIV-1 virions produced in nonpermissive cells incorporate hA3G and have a severely reduced ability to produce viral DNA in newly infected cells. While it has been proposed that the reduction in DNA production is due to hA3G-facilitated deamination of cytidine, followed by DNA degradation, we provide evidence here that a decrease in the synthesis of the DNA by reverse transcriptase may account for a significant part of this reduction. During the infection of cells with Vif-negative HIV-1 produced from 293T cells transiently expressing hA3G, much of the inhibition of early (≥50% reduction) and late (≥95% reduction) viral DNA production, and of viral infectivity (≥95% reduction), can occur independently of DNA deamination. The inhibition of the production of early minus-sense strong stop DNA is also correlated with a similar inability of tRNA3 Lys to prime reverse transcription. A similar reduction in tRNA3 Lys priming and viral infectivity is also seen in the naturally nonpermissive cell H9, albeit at significantly lower levels of hA3G expression.


2000 ◽  
Vol 74 (2) ◽  
pp. 693-701 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph T. C. Shieh ◽  
Julio Martín ◽  
Gordon Baltuch ◽  
Michael H. Malim ◽  
Francisco González-Scarano

ABSTRACT Microglia are the main reservoir for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) in the central nervous system (CNS), and multinucleated giant cells, the result of fusion of HIV-1-infected microglia and brain macrophages, are the neuropathologic hallmark of HIV dementia. One potential explanation for the formation of syncytia is viral adaptation for these CD4+ CNS cells. HIV-1BORI-15, a virus adapted to growth in microglia by sequential passage in vitro, mediates high levels of fusion and replicates more efficiently in microglia and monocyte-derived-macrophages than its unpassaged parent (J. M. Strizki, A. V. Albright, H. Sheng, M. O'Connor, L. Perrin, and F. Gonzalez-Scarano, J. Virol. 70:7654–7662, 1996). Since the interaction between the viral envelope glycoprotein and CD4 and the chemokine receptor mediates fusion and plays a key role in tropism, we have analyzed the HIV-1BORI-15 env as a fusogen and in recombinant and pseudotyped viruses. Its syncytium-forming phenotype is not the result of a switch in coreceptor use but rather of the HIV-1BORI-15envelope-mediated fusion of CD4+CCR5+ cells with greater efficiency than that of its parental strain, either by itself or in the context of a recombinant virus. Genetic analysis indicated that the syncytium-forming phenotype was due to four discrete amino acid differences in V1/V2, with a single-amino-acid change between the parent and the adapted virus (E153G) responsible for the majority of the effect. Additionally, HIV-1BORI-15 env-pseudotyped viruses were less sensitive to decreases in the levels of CD4 on transfected 293T cells, leading to the hypothesis that the differences in V1/V2 alter the interaction between this envelope and CD4 or CCR5, or both. In sum, the characterization of the envelope of HIV-1BORI-15, a highly fusogenic glycoprotein with genetic determinants in V1/V2, may lead to a better understanding of the relationship between HIV replication and syncytium formation in the CNS and of the importance of this region of gp120 in the interaction with CD4 and CCR5.


2008 ◽  
Vol 82 (21) ◽  
pp. 10811-10819 ◽  
Author(s):  
Massimo Pizzato ◽  
Elena Popova ◽  
Heinrich G. Göttlinger

ABSTRACT Nef is an accessory protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) that enhances the infectivity of progeny virions when expressed in virus-producing cells. The requirement for Nef for optimal infectivity is, at least in part, determined by the envelope (Env) glycoprotein, because it can be eliminated by pseudotyping HIV-1 particles with pH-dependent Env proteins. To investigate the role of Env in the function of Nef, we have examined the effect of Nef on the infectivity of Env-deficient HIV-1 particles pseudotyped with viral receptors for cells expressing cognate Env proteins. We found that Nef significantly enhances the infectivity of CD4-chemokine receptor pseudotypes for cells expressing HIV-1 Env. Nef also increased the infectivity of HIV-1 particles pseudotyped with Tva, the receptor for subgroup A Rous sarcoma virus (RSV-A), even though Nef had no effect if the pH-dependent Env protein of RSV-A was used for pseudotyping. However, Nef does not always enhance viral infectivity if the normal orientation of the Env-receptor interaction is reversed, because the entry of Env-deficient HIV-1 into cells expressing the vesicular stomatitis virus G protein was unaffected by Nef. Together, our results demonstrate that the presence of a viral Env protein during virus production is not required for the ability of Nef to increase viral infectivity. Furthermore, since the infectivity of Tva pseudotypes was blocked by inhibitors of endosomal acidification, we conclude that low-pH-dependent entry does not always bypass the requirement for Nef.


2009 ◽  
Vol 83 (15) ◽  
pp. 7467-7474 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jia Weng ◽  
Dimitry N. Krementsov ◽  
Sandhya Khurana ◽  
Nathan H. Roy ◽  
Markus Thali

ABSTRACT In vitro propagation studies have established that human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) is most efficiently transmitted at the virological synapse that forms between producer and target cells. Despite the presence of the viral envelope glycoprotein (Env) and CD4 and chemokine receptors at the respective surfaces, producer and target cells usually do not fuse with each other but disengage after the viral particles have been delivered, consistent with the idea that syncytia, at least in vitro, are not required for HIV-1 spread. Here, we tested whether tetraspanins, which are well known regulators of cellular membrane fusion processes that are enriched at HIV-1 exit sites, regulate syncytium formation. We found that overexpression of tetraspanins in producer cells leads to reduced syncytium formation, while downregulation has the opposite effect. Further, we document that repression of Env-induced cell-cell fusion by tetraspanins depends on the presence of viral Gag, and we demonstrate that fusion repression requires the recruitment of Env by Gag to tetraspanin-enriched microdomains (TEMs). However, sensitivity to fusion repression by tetraspanins varied for different viral strains, despite comparable recruitment of their Envs to TEMs. Overall, these data establish tetraspanins as negative regulators of HIV-1-induced cell-cell fusion, and they start delineating the requirements for this regulation.


2003 ◽  
Vol 77 (6) ◽  
pp. 3634-3646 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vandana Kalia ◽  
Surojit Sarkar ◽  
Phalguni Gupta ◽  
Ronald C. Montelaro

ABSTRACT Two highly conserved cationic amphipathic α-helical motifs, designated lentivirus lytic peptides 1 and 2 (LLP-1 and LLP-2), have been characterized in the carboxyl terminus of the transmembrane (TM) envelope glycoprotein (Env) of lentiviruses . Although various properties have been attributed to these domains, their structural and functional significance is not clearly understood. To determine the specific contributions of the Env LLP domains to Env expression, processing, and incorporation and to viral replication and syncytium induction, site-directed LLP mutants of a primary dualtropic infectious human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) isolate (ME46) were examined. Substitutions were made for highly conserved arginine residues in either the LLP-1 or LLP-2 domain (MX1 or MX2, respectively) or in both domains (MX4). The HIV-1 mutants with altered LLP domains demonstrated distinct phenotypes. The LLP-1 mutants (MX1 and MX4) were replication defective and showed an average of 85% decrease in infectivity, which was associated with an evident decrease in gp41 incorporation into virions without a significant decrease in Env expression or processing in transfected 293T cells. In contrast, MX2 virus was replication competent and incorporated a full complement of Env into its virions, indicating a differential role for the LLP-1 domain in Env incorporation. Interestingly, the replication-competent MX2 virus was impaired in its ability to induce syncytia in T-cell lines. This defect in cell-cell fusion did not correlate with apparent defects in the levels of cell surface Env expression, oligomerization, or conformation. The lack of syncytium formation, however, correlated with a decrease of about 90% in MX2 Env fusogenicity compared to that of wild-type Env in quantitative luciferase-based cell-cell fusion assays. The LLP-1 mutant MX1 and MX4 Envs also exhibited an average of 80% decrease in fusogenicity. Altogether, these results demonstrate for the first time that the highly conserved LLP domains perform critical but distinct functions in Env incorporation and fusogenicity.


1999 ◽  
Vol 73 (10) ◽  
pp. 8290-8302 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steve S.-L. Chen ◽  
Sheau-Fen Lee ◽  
Chin-Kai Chuang ◽  
V. Samuel Raj

ABSTRACT We previously reported that a human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) envelope (Env) mutant with the whole cytoplasmic domain deleted, denoted mutant TC, is able to dominantly interfere with wild-type (wt) virus infectivity. In the present study, the feasibility of developing a dominant negative mutant-based genetic anti-HIV strategy targeting the gp41 cytoplasmic domain was investigated. Mutants TC and 427,TC, a TC derivative with a Trp-to-Ser substitution introduced into residue 427 in the CD4-binding site, and a series of mutants with deletions in the cytoplasmic domain, effectivelytrans-dominantly interfered with wt Env-mediated viral infectivity, as demonstrated by an env trans-complementation assay. The syncytium formation-defective 427,TC double mutant not only inhibited heterologous LAV and ELI Env-mediated viral infectivity but also interfered with syncytium formation and infectivity mediated by the Env proteins of the two primary isolates 92BR and 92US. Stable HeLa-CD4-LTR-β-gal clones that harbored Tat-controlled expression cassettes encoding the control ΔKS, which had a deletion in the env gene, wt, or mutantenv gene were generated. Viral transmission mediated by laboratory-adapted T-cell-tropic HXB2 and NL4-3 viruses was greatly reduced in the TC and 427,TC transfectants compared to that observed in the control ΔKS and wt transfectants. Viral replication caused by HXB2 and NL4-3 viruses and by macrophage-tropic ConB and ADA-GG viruses was delayed or reduced in human CD4+ T cells transfected with the 427,TC env construct compared to that observed in cells transfected with the control ΔKS or TC envconstruct. The lack of significant interference by TC mutant was due neither to the lack of TC env gene integration into host DNA nor to the lack of TC Env expression upon Tat induction. These results indicate that this 427,TC Env double mutant has a role in the development of trans-dominant mutant-based genetic anti-HIV strategies.


2009 ◽  
Vol 73 (2) ◽  
pp. 211-232 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simon Henriet ◽  
Gaëlle Mercenne ◽  
Serena Bernacchi ◽  
Jean-Christophe Paillart ◽  
Roland Marquet

SUMMARY The viral infectivity factor (Vif) is dispensable for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) replication in so-called permissive cells but is required for replication in nonpermissive cell lines and for pathogenesis. Virions produced in the absence of Vif have an aberrant morphology and an unstable core and are unable to complete reverse transcription. Recent studies demonstrated that human APOBEC-3G (hA3G) and APOBEC-3F (hA3F), which are selectively expressed in nonpermissive cells, possess strong anti-HIV-1 activity and are sufficient to confer a nonpermissive phenotype. Vif induces the degradation of hA3G and hA3F, suggesting that its main function is to counteract these cellular factors. Most studies focused on the hypermutation induced by the cytidine deaminase activity of hA3G and hA3F and on their Vif-induced degradation by the proteasome. However, recent studies suggested that several mechanisms are involved both in the antiviral activity of hA3G and hA3F and in the way Vif counteracts these antiviral factors. Attempts to reconcile the studies involving Vif in virus assembly and stability with these recent findings suggest that hA3G and hA3F partially exert their antiviral activity independently of their catalytic activity by destabilizing the viral core and the reverse transcription complex, possibly by interfering with the assembly and/or maturation of the viral particles. Vif could then counteract hA3G and hA3F by excluding them from the viral assembly intermediates through competition for the viral genomic RNA, by regulating the proteolytic processing of Pr55Gag, by enhancing the efficiency of the reverse transcription process, and by inhibiting the enzymatic activities of hA3G and hA3F.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document