Publication | Open Access
CD4 and its role in infection of rabbit cell lines by human immunodeficiency virus type 1.
29
Citations
42
References
1992
Year
ImmunologyRabbit Cell LinesMolecular BiologyAntigen ProcessingImmune SystemHuman RetrovirusPrimary ImmunodeficiencyVirologyAutoimmunityChronic Viral InfectionHivCell BiologyHiv-1 ReceptorHuman Cd4Aids PathogenesisHiv-1 InfectivityAntiviral ResponseMedicineViral Immunity
Human CD4 (HuCD4) is the principal receptor for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) in human cell infection. Susceptibility of rabbit cell lines to infection with HIV-1 raised questions concerning whether a CD4 homolog serves as HIV-1 receptor on rabbit cells. Sequence comparisons of rabbit CD4 (RbCD4) cloned from a rabbit thymus cDNA library showed that 6 of the 18 residues implicated in HIV-1 binding by CD4 differ between the human and rabbit proteins. No correlation between RbCD4 expression by rabbit cell lines and their ability to support HIV-1 infection was seen. Transfection of RbCD4-negative, HTLV-I-transformed cell lines with HuCD4 significantly enhanced HIV-1 infectivity, suggesting that these lines lack a receptor present on other RbCD4-negative lines that produce high levels of p24 in their native state. Inhibition of HIV-1 infection with soluble HuCD4 was demonstrated for all rabbit lines tested, but complete inhibition was obtained only with a rabbit T-cell line expressing RbCD4 and with HuCD4 transfectants. The results suggest that HIV-1 infection of the RbCD4-positive line proceeds through a receptor similar to HuCD4 but that an additional receptor or receptors may serve this purpose in RbCD4-negative lines.
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