Publication | Open Access
Alanine Substitutions of Polar and Nonpolar Residues in the Amino-Terminal Domain of CCR5 Differently Impair Entry of Macrophage- and Dualtropic Isolates of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1
126
Citations
37
References
1998
Year
Viral ReplicationAlanine SubstitutionsImmunologyMolecular BiologyViral Structural ProteinVirus StructureHuman RetrovirusResistance Mutation (Virology)Multiple Extracellular DomainsTyrosine ResiduesVirologyHivAids PathogenesisSignal TransductionPathogenesisAntiviral ResponseAmino-terminal DomainMedicineNonpolar ResiduesDualtropic Hiv-1
Multiple extracellular domains of the CC-chemokine receptor CCR5 are important for its function as a human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) coreceptor. We have recently demonstrated by alanine scanning mutagenesis that the negatively charged residues in the CCR5 amino-terminal domain are essential for gp120 binding and coreceptor function. We have now extended our analysis of this domain to include most polar and nonpolar amino acids. Replacement of alanine with all four tyrosine residues and with serine-17 and cysteine-20 decrease or abolish gp120 binding and CCR5 coreceptor activity. Tyrosine-15 is essential for viral entry irrespective of the test isolate. Substitutions at some of the other positions impair the entry of dualtropic HIV-1 isolates more than that of macrophagetropic ones.
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