The ability of HIV type 1 to use CCR-3 as a coreceptor is controlled by envelope V1/V2 sequences acting in conjunction with a CCR-5 tropic V3 loop

TM Ross, BR Cullen - … of the National Academy of Sciences, 1998 - National Acad Sciences
TM Ross, BR Cullen
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1998National Acad Sciences
Although infection by primary HIV type 1 (HIV-1) isolates normally requires the functional
interaction of the viral envelope protein with both CD4 and the CCR-5 coreceptor, a subset
of such isolates also are able to use the distinct CCR-3 receptor. By analyzing the ability of a
series of wild-type and chimeric HIV-1 envelope proteins to mediate CCR-3-dependent
infection, we have determined that CCR-3 tropism maps to the V1 and V2 variable region of
envelope. Although substitution of the V1/V2 region of a CCR-3 tropic envelope into the …
Although infection by primary HIV type 1 (HIV-1) isolates normally requires the functional interaction of the viral envelope protein with both CD4 and the CCR-5 coreceptor, a subset of such isolates also are able to use the distinct CCR-3 receptor. By analyzing the ability of a series of wild-type and chimeric HIV-1 envelope proteins to mediate CCR-3-dependent infection, we have determined that CCR-3 tropism maps to the V1 and V2 variable region of envelope. Although substitution of the V1/V2 region of a CCR-3 tropic envelope into the context of a CCR-5 tropic envelope is both necessary and sufficient to confer CCR-3 tropism, this same substitution has no phenotypic effect when inserted into a CXCR-4 tropic HIV-1 envelope context. However, this latter chimera acquires both CCR-3 and CCR-5 tropism when a CCR-5 tropic V3 loop sequence also is introduced. These data demonstrate that the V1/2 region of envelope can, like the V3 loop region, encode a particular coreceptor requirement and suggest that a functional envelope:CCR-3 interaction may depend on the cooperative interaction of CCR-3 with both the V1/V2 and the V3 region of envelope.
National Acad Sciences