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Cross-linking of Fas By Antibodies to a Peculiar Domain of gp120 V3 Loop Can Enhance T Cell Apoptosis in HIV-1–infected Patients

Previous studies have demonstrated that T cell–reactive antibodies in HIV-1 infection contribute to lymphocyte depletion by cytotoxicity that involves differential membrane targets, such as the 43.5-kD receptor on CEM cells. Here, we show that these antibodies bind Fas as result of a molecular mimic...

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Autores principales: Silvestris, Franco, Nagata, Shigekazu, Cafforio, Paola, Silvestris, Nicola, Dammacco, Franco
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1996
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2196362/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8976184
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author Silvestris, Franco
Nagata, Shigekazu
Cafforio, Paola
Silvestris, Nicola
Dammacco, Franco
author_facet Silvestris, Franco
Nagata, Shigekazu
Cafforio, Paola
Silvestris, Nicola
Dammacco, Franco
author_sort Silvestris, Franco
collection PubMed
description Previous studies have demonstrated that T cell–reactive antibodies in HIV-1 infection contribute to lymphocyte depletion by cytotoxicity that involves differential membrane targets, such as the 43.5-kD receptor on CEM cells. Here, we show that these antibodies bind Fas as result of a molecular mimicry of the gp120. Both flow cytometry and immunoblotting using the human Fas-transfected mouse WC8 lymphoma revealed positive binding of immunoglobulin G from several patients to a 43.8-kD membrane receptor that also reacts with the CH11 anti-Fas monoclonal antibody. Specificity to Fas was further confirmed to chimeric recombinant human Fas-Fc by ELISA, whereas overlapping peptide mapping of a Fas domain (VEINCTR–N) shared by gp120 V3 loop demonstrated a predominant affinity to the full-length 10-mer peptide. Four anti-Fas affinity preparations greatly increased the subdiploid DNA peak of CEM cells similar to agonist ligands of Fas. In addition, anti-Fas immunoglobulin G strongly inhibited the [(3)H]thymidine uptake of CEM cells in proliferative assays, inducing a suppression as high as provoked by both CH11 mAb and recombinant human Fas ligand. Since anti-Fas were reactive to gp120, it is conceivable that antibodies binding that domain within the V3 region are effective cross-linkers of Fas and increase apoptosis in peripheral T cells. These results suggest that autologous stimulation of the Fas pathway, rather than of lymphocytotoxic antibodies, may aggravate lymphopenia in a number of HIV-1(+) subjects.
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spelling pubmed-21963622008-04-16 Cross-linking of Fas By Antibodies to a Peculiar Domain of gp120 V3 Loop Can Enhance T Cell Apoptosis in HIV-1–infected Patients Silvestris, Franco Nagata, Shigekazu Cafforio, Paola Silvestris, Nicola Dammacco, Franco J Exp Med Article Previous studies have demonstrated that T cell–reactive antibodies in HIV-1 infection contribute to lymphocyte depletion by cytotoxicity that involves differential membrane targets, such as the 43.5-kD receptor on CEM cells. Here, we show that these antibodies bind Fas as result of a molecular mimicry of the gp120. Both flow cytometry and immunoblotting using the human Fas-transfected mouse WC8 lymphoma revealed positive binding of immunoglobulin G from several patients to a 43.8-kD membrane receptor that also reacts with the CH11 anti-Fas monoclonal antibody. Specificity to Fas was further confirmed to chimeric recombinant human Fas-Fc by ELISA, whereas overlapping peptide mapping of a Fas domain (VEINCTR–N) shared by gp120 V3 loop demonstrated a predominant affinity to the full-length 10-mer peptide. Four anti-Fas affinity preparations greatly increased the subdiploid DNA peak of CEM cells similar to agonist ligands of Fas. In addition, anti-Fas immunoglobulin G strongly inhibited the [(3)H]thymidine uptake of CEM cells in proliferative assays, inducing a suppression as high as provoked by both CH11 mAb and recombinant human Fas ligand. Since anti-Fas were reactive to gp120, it is conceivable that antibodies binding that domain within the V3 region are effective cross-linkers of Fas and increase apoptosis in peripheral T cells. These results suggest that autologous stimulation of the Fas pathway, rather than of lymphocytotoxic antibodies, may aggravate lymphopenia in a number of HIV-1(+) subjects. The Rockefeller University Press 1996-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2196362/ /pubmed/8976184 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Silvestris, Franco
Nagata, Shigekazu
Cafforio, Paola
Silvestris, Nicola
Dammacco, Franco
Cross-linking of Fas By Antibodies to a Peculiar Domain of gp120 V3 Loop Can Enhance T Cell Apoptosis in HIV-1–infected Patients
title Cross-linking of Fas By Antibodies to a Peculiar Domain of gp120 V3 Loop Can Enhance T Cell Apoptosis in HIV-1–infected Patients
title_full Cross-linking of Fas By Antibodies to a Peculiar Domain of gp120 V3 Loop Can Enhance T Cell Apoptosis in HIV-1–infected Patients
title_fullStr Cross-linking of Fas By Antibodies to a Peculiar Domain of gp120 V3 Loop Can Enhance T Cell Apoptosis in HIV-1–infected Patients
title_full_unstemmed Cross-linking of Fas By Antibodies to a Peculiar Domain of gp120 V3 Loop Can Enhance T Cell Apoptosis in HIV-1–infected Patients
title_short Cross-linking of Fas By Antibodies to a Peculiar Domain of gp120 V3 Loop Can Enhance T Cell Apoptosis in HIV-1–infected Patients
title_sort cross-linking of fas by antibodies to a peculiar domain of gp120 v3 loop can enhance t cell apoptosis in hiv-1–infected patients
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2196362/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8976184
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