Publication | Open Access
Potent Anti-HIV Chemokine Analogs Direct Post-Endocytic Sorting of CCR5
20
Citations
27
References
2015
Year
ImmunologyAntiviral DrugCellular PhysiologyAntiviral Drug DevelopmentCell SignalingG Protein-coupled ReceptorCell TraffickingReceptor (Biochemistry)G Protein-coupled ReceptorsHivPharmacologyCell BiologyTransient AssociationSignal TransductionFunctional SelectivityAntiviral TherapyIntracellular TraffickingMedicineDrug DiscoveryDurable Association
G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are desensitized and internalized following activation. They are then subjected to post-endocytic sorting (degradation, slow recycling or fast recycling). The majority of research on post-endocytic sorting has focused on the role of sequence-encoded address structures on receptors. This study focuses on trafficking of CCR5, a GPCR chemokine receptor and the principal entry coreceptor for HIV. Using Chinese Hamster Ovary cells stably expressing CCR5 we show that two different anti-HIV chemokine analogs, PSC-RANTES and 5P14-RANTES, direct receptor trafficking into two distinct subcellular compartments: the trans-Golgi network and the endosome recycling compartment, respectively. Our results indicate that a likely mechanism for ligand-directed sorting of CCR5 involves capacity of the chemokine analogs to elicit the formation of durable complexes of CCR5 and arrestin2 (beta-arrestin-1), with PSC-RANTES eliciting durable association in contrast to 5P14-RANTES, which elicits only transient association.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1