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CD4-independent use of the CCR5 receptor by sequential primary SIVsm isolates

BACKGROUND: CD4-independence has been taken as a sign of a more open envelope structure that is more accessible to neutralizing antibodies and may confer altered cell tropism. In the present study, we analyzed SIVsm isolates for CD4-independent use of CCR5, mode of CCR5-use and macrophage tropism. T...

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Autores principales: Laurén, Anna, Vincic, Elzbieta, Hoshino, Hiroo, Thorstensson, Rigmor, Fenyö, Eva Maria
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1950888/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17645788
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-4-50
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author Laurén, Anna
Vincic, Elzbieta
Hoshino, Hiroo
Thorstensson, Rigmor
Fenyö, Eva Maria
author_facet Laurén, Anna
Vincic, Elzbieta
Hoshino, Hiroo
Thorstensson, Rigmor
Fenyö, Eva Maria
author_sort Laurén, Anna
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: CD4-independence has been taken as a sign of a more open envelope structure that is more accessible to neutralizing antibodies and may confer altered cell tropism. In the present study, we analyzed SIVsm isolates for CD4-independent use of CCR5, mode of CCR5-use and macrophage tropism. The isolates have been collected sequentially from 13 experimentally infected cynomolgus macaques and have previously been shown to use CCR5 together with CD4. Furthermore, viruses obtained early after infection were neutralization sensitive, while neutralization resistance appeared already three months after infection in monkeys with progressive immunodeficiency. RESULTS: Depending whether isolated early or late in infection, two phenotypes of CD4-independent use of CCR5 could be observed. The inoculum virus (SIVsm isolate SMM-3) and reisolates obtained early in infection often showed a pronounced CD4-independence since virus production and/or syncytia induction could be detected directly in NP-2 cells expressing CCR5 but not CD4 (CD4-independent-HIGH). Conversely, late isolates were often more CD4-dependent in that productive infection in NP-2/CCR5 cells was in most cases weak and was revealed only after cocultivation of infected NP-2/CCR5 cells with peripheral blood mononuclear cells (CD4-independent-LOW). Considering neutralization sensitivity of these isolates, newly infected macaques often harbored virus populations with a CD4-independent-HIGH and neutralization sensitive phenotype that changed to a CD4-independent-LOW and neutralization resistant virus population in the course of infection. Phenotype changes occurred faster in progressor than long-term non-progressor macaques. The phenotypes were not reflected by macrophage tropism, since all isolates replicated efficiently in macrophages. Infection of cells expressing CCR5/CXCR4 chimeric receptors revealed that SIVsm used the CCR5 receptor in a different mode than HIV-1. CONCLUSION: Our results show that SIVsm isolates use CCR5 independently of CD4. While the degree of CD4 independence and neutralization sensitivity vary over time, the ability to productively infect monocyte-derived macrophages remains at a steady high level throughout infection. The mode of CCR5 use differs between SIVsm and HIV-1, SIVsm appears to be more flexible than HIV-1 in its receptor requirement. We suggest that the mode of CCR5 coreceptor use and CD4-independence are interrelated properties.
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spelling pubmed-19508882007-08-24 CD4-independent use of the CCR5 receptor by sequential primary SIVsm isolates Laurén, Anna Vincic, Elzbieta Hoshino, Hiroo Thorstensson, Rigmor Fenyö, Eva Maria Retrovirology Research BACKGROUND: CD4-independence has been taken as a sign of a more open envelope structure that is more accessible to neutralizing antibodies and may confer altered cell tropism. In the present study, we analyzed SIVsm isolates for CD4-independent use of CCR5, mode of CCR5-use and macrophage tropism. The isolates have been collected sequentially from 13 experimentally infected cynomolgus macaques and have previously been shown to use CCR5 together with CD4. Furthermore, viruses obtained early after infection were neutralization sensitive, while neutralization resistance appeared already three months after infection in monkeys with progressive immunodeficiency. RESULTS: Depending whether isolated early or late in infection, two phenotypes of CD4-independent use of CCR5 could be observed. The inoculum virus (SIVsm isolate SMM-3) and reisolates obtained early in infection often showed a pronounced CD4-independence since virus production and/or syncytia induction could be detected directly in NP-2 cells expressing CCR5 but not CD4 (CD4-independent-HIGH). Conversely, late isolates were often more CD4-dependent in that productive infection in NP-2/CCR5 cells was in most cases weak and was revealed only after cocultivation of infected NP-2/CCR5 cells with peripheral blood mononuclear cells (CD4-independent-LOW). Considering neutralization sensitivity of these isolates, newly infected macaques often harbored virus populations with a CD4-independent-HIGH and neutralization sensitive phenotype that changed to a CD4-independent-LOW and neutralization resistant virus population in the course of infection. Phenotype changes occurred faster in progressor than long-term non-progressor macaques. The phenotypes were not reflected by macrophage tropism, since all isolates replicated efficiently in macrophages. Infection of cells expressing CCR5/CXCR4 chimeric receptors revealed that SIVsm used the CCR5 receptor in a different mode than HIV-1. CONCLUSION: Our results show that SIVsm isolates use CCR5 independently of CD4. While the degree of CD4 independence and neutralization sensitivity vary over time, the ability to productively infect monocyte-derived macrophages remains at a steady high level throughout infection. The mode of CCR5 use differs between SIVsm and HIV-1, SIVsm appears to be more flexible than HIV-1 in its receptor requirement. We suggest that the mode of CCR5 coreceptor use and CD4-independence are interrelated properties. BioMed Central 2007-07-23 /pmc/articles/PMC1950888/ /pubmed/17645788 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-4-50 Text en Copyright © 2007 Laurén et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Laurén, Anna
Vincic, Elzbieta
Hoshino, Hiroo
Thorstensson, Rigmor
Fenyö, Eva Maria
CD4-independent use of the CCR5 receptor by sequential primary SIVsm isolates
title CD4-independent use of the CCR5 receptor by sequential primary SIVsm isolates
title_full CD4-independent use of the CCR5 receptor by sequential primary SIVsm isolates
title_fullStr CD4-independent use of the CCR5 receptor by sequential primary SIVsm isolates
title_full_unstemmed CD4-independent use of the CCR5 receptor by sequential primary SIVsm isolates
title_short CD4-independent use of the CCR5 receptor by sequential primary SIVsm isolates
title_sort cd4-independent use of the ccr5 receptor by sequential primary sivsm isolates
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1950888/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17645788
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-4-50
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