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1.
Y Li  L Luo  N Rasool    C Y Kang 《Journal of virology》1993,67(1):584-588
Conflicting results have been reported regarding the role of carbohydrate on human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) envelope glycoprotein gp120 in CD4 receptor binding. Glycosylated, deglycosylated, and nonglycosylated forms of HIV type 1 (HIV-1) and HIV-2 gp120s were used to examine CD4 receptor-binding activity. Nonglycosylated forms of gp120 generated either by deletion of the signal sequence of HIV-1 gp120 or by synthesis in the presence of tunicamycin failed to bind to CD4. In contrast, highly mannosylated gp120 bound to soluble CD4 molecules well. Enzymatic removal of carbohydrate chains from glycosylated gp120 by endoglycosidase H or an endoglycosidase F/N glycanase mixture had no effect on the ability of gp120 to bind CD4. An experiment which measured the ability of gp120 to bind to CD4 as an assay of the proper conformation of gp120 showed that carbohydrate chains on gp120 are not required for the interaction between gp120 and CD4 but that N-linked glycosylation is essential for generation of the proper conformation of gp120 to provide a CD4-binding site.  相似文献   

2.
We have shown that enzymatic removal of N-linked glycans from human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) recombinant envelope glycoproteins gp160 and gp120 produced in BHK-21 cells did not significantly reduce their ability to bind to CD4, the cellular receptor for the virus. Because recombinant proteins may behave differently from proteins present on virions, we investigated whether such viral envelope glycoproteins either in a purified form or present on viral particles could be deglycosylated by treatment with an endoglycosidase F-N-glycanase mixture which cleaves all accessible glycan moieties. Endoglycosidase analysis of the carbohydrate composition of purified viral gp120 (vgp120) indicated a glycosylation pattern similar to that for recombinant gp120 (rgp120), and treatment with endoglycosidase F-N-glycanase resulted in comparable molecular weight (MW) reduction for both molecules. Similarly, after immunoblotting of the deglycosylated viral preparation, the characteristic 160- and 120-kilodalton (kDa) bands were replaced by 90- and 60-kDa bands, respectively. The apparent MW of gp41 shifted to 35 kDa. These results are consistent with complete deglycosylation. The immunoreactive conformation of envelope glycoproteins remained unaltered after deglycosylation: they were recognized to the same extent by specific human polyclonal or mouse monoclonal antibodies, and no proteolysis of viral proteins occurred during enzymatic treatment. Deglycosylation of vgp120 resulted in a less than 10-fold reduction of the ability to bind to CD4, presented either in a soluble form or at the cell membrane. In addition, deglycosylation significantly reduced, but did not abolish, HIV-1 binding to and infectivity of CD4+ cells as determined, respectively, by an indirect immunofluorescence assay and a quantitative dose-response infection assay. Taken together, these results indicate that removal of glycans present on mature envelope glycoproteins of HIV-1 diminishes but does not abolish either virus binding to CD4 or its capacity to infect CD4+ cells.  相似文献   

3.
The gp120 envelope glycoprotein of primary human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) promotes virus entry by sequentially binding CD4 and the CCR5 chemokine receptor on the target cell. Previously, we adapted a primary HIV-1 isolate, ADA, to replicate in CD4-negative canine cells expressing human CCR5. The gp120 changes responsible for CD4-independent replication were limited to the V2 loop-V1/V2 stem. Here we show that elimination of a single glycosylation site at asparagine 197 in the V1/V2 stem is sufficient for CD4-independent gp120 binding to CCR5 and for HIV-1 entry into CD4-negative cells expressing CCR5. Deletion of the V1/V2 loops also allowed CD4-independent viral entry and gp120 binding to CCR5. The binding of the wild-type ADA gp120 to CCR5 was less dependent upon CD4 at 4 degrees C than at 37 degrees C. In the absence of the V1/V2 loops, neither removal of the N-linked carbohydrate at asparagine 197 nor lowering of the temperature increased the CD4-independent phenotypes. A CCR5-binding conformation of gp120, achieved by CD4 interaction or by modification of temperature, glycosylation, or variable loops, was preferentially recognized by the monoclonal antibody 48d. These results suggest that the CCR5-binding region of gp120 is occluded by the V1/V2 variable loops, the position of which can be modulated by temperature, CD4 binding, or an N-linked glycan in the V1/V2 stem.  相似文献   

4.
W R Lee  X F Yu  W J Syu  M Essex    T H Lee 《Journal of virology》1992,66(3):1799-1803
Amino acid substitutions were introduced into four conserved N-linked glycosylation sites of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 envelope transmembrane glycoprotein, gp41, to alter the canonical N-linked glycosylation sequences. One altered site produced a severe impairment of viral infectivity, which raises the possibility that N-linked sugars at this site may have an important role in the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 life cycle.  相似文献   

5.
W K Wang  M Essex    T H Lee 《Journal of virology》1996,70(1):607-611
The second major cysteine loop of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 envelope glycoprotein gp120 contains 5 to 11 consensus N-linked glycosylation sites, which is disproportionately higher than the number of such sites found in other regions of gp120. Amino acid substitutions introduced at three of six N-linked glycosylation sites in this region of an infectious molecular clone, HXB2, resulted in severe impairment of virus infectivity. Isolation and genetic characterization of a revertant of this mutant revealed an isoleucine-for-valine substitution at position 84 in constant region 1 and an isoleucine-for-methionine substitution at position 434 in constant region 4. Further mutational analysis indicated that either isoleucine substitution was sufficient to confer the revertant phenotype. These findings demonstrate that V1/V2 not only functionally interacts with C4, as previously reported, but also interacts with C1. The observation that compensatory changes do not involve regeneration of N-linked glycosylation sites in the second major cysteine loop suggests that replication of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 in vitro is independent of the presence of a disproportionate number of N-linked glycosylation sites within this loop.  相似文献   

6.
A soluble form of recombinant gp120 of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 was used as an immunogen for production of murine monoclonal antibodies. These monoclonal antibodies were characterized for their ability to block the interaction between gp120 and the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome virus receptor, CD4. Three of the monoclonal antibodies were found to inhibit this interaction, whereas the other antibodies were found to be ineffective at blocking binding. The gp120 epitopes which are recognized by these monoclonal antibodies were mapped by using a combination of Western blot (immunoblot) analysis of gp120 proteolytic fragments, immunoaffinity purification of fragments of gp120, and antibody screening of a random gp120 gene fragment expression library produced in the lambda gt11 expression system. Two monoclonal antibodies which blocked gp120-CD4 interaction were found to map to adjacent sites in the carboxy-terminal region of the glycoprotein, suggesting that this area is important in the interaction between gp120 and CD4. One nonblocking antibody was found to map to a position that was C terminal to this CD4 blocking region. Interestingly, the other nonblocking monoclonal antibodies were found to map either to a highly conserved region in the central part of the gp120 polypeptide or to a highly conserved region near the N terminus of the glycoprotein. N-terminal deletion mutants of the soluble envelope glycoprotein which lack these highly conserved domains but maintain the C-terminal CD4 interaction sites were unable to bind tightly to the CD4 receptor. These results suggest that although the N-terminal and central conserved domains of intact gp120 do not appear to be directly required for CD4 binding, they may contain information that allows other parts of the molecule to form the appropriate structure for CD4 interaction.  相似文献   

7.
P L Earl  B Moss    R W Doms 《Journal of virology》1991,65(4):2047-2055
A detailed kinetic and quantitative analysis of the early and late biosynthetic events undergone by the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 envelope protein expressed by a recombinant vaccinia virus was performed. Early folding events that occurred in the endoplasmic reticulum included disulfide bond formation (t1/2 approximately 10 min), folding of envelope protein into a form competent to bind CD4 (t1/2 approximately 15 min), and specific and transient association and dissociation with GRP78-BiP (t1/2 approximately 25 min). After initial folding, envelope protein monomers formed noncovalently associated dimers with high efficiency (t1/2 approximately 30 min). Studies with brefeldin A, a compound that inhibits endoplasmic reticulum-to-Golgi transport, suggested that assembly occurred in the endoplasmic reticulum while cleavage of gp160 into gp120/gp41 subunits occurred in a post-endoplasmic reticulum compartment. Transport to the Golgi was monitored by modification of N-linked sugars to forms partially resistant to endoglycosidase H. The kinetics of endoglycosidase H resistance were nearly identical to the kinetics of gp160 cleavage (t1/2 approximately 80 min). Cleavage efficiency was strongly cell type dependent, ranging from 13 to 70%. By contrast, approximately 50% of the gp120 generated by the cleavage event was shed (t1/2 approximately 120 min) regardless of the cell type used. The results are discussed in terms of the overall biosynthetic pathway of the envelope protein and provide a framework with which to assess the effects of mutations on structure and function.  相似文献   

8.
Forty-six monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) able to bind to the native, monomeric gp120 glycoprotein of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) LAI (HXBc2) strain were used to generate a competition matrix. The data suggest the existence of two faces of the gp120 glycoprotein. The binding sites for the viral receptor, CD4, and neutralizing MAbs appear to cluster on one face, which is presumably exposed on the assembled, oligomeric envelope glycoprotein complex. A second gp120 face, which is presumably inaccessible on the envelope glycoprotein complex, contains a number of epitopes for nonneutralizing antibodies. This analysis should be useful for understanding both the interaction of antibodies with the HIV-1 gp120 glycoprotein and neutralization of HIV-1.  相似文献   

9.
The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) gp120 exterior envelope glycoprotein interacts with the viral receptor (CD4) and with the gp41 transmembrane envelope glycoprotein. To study the interaction of the gp120 and gp41 envelope glycoproteins, we compared the abilities of anti-gp120 monoclonal antibodies to bind soluble gp120 and a soluble glycoprotein, sgp140, that contains gp120 and gp41 exterior domains. The occlusion or alteration of a subset of gp120 epitopes on the latter molecule allowed the definition of a gp41 "footprint" on the gp120 antibody competition map. The occlusion of these epitopes on the sgp140 glycoprotein was decreased by the binding of soluble CD4. The gp120 epitopes implicated in the interaction with the gp41 ectodomain were disrupted by deletions of the first (C1) and fifth (C5) conserved gp120 regions. These deletions did not affect the integrity of the discontinuous binding sites for CD4 and neutralizing monoclonal antibodies. Thus, the gp41 interface on the HIV-1 gp120 glycoprotein, which elicits nonneutralizing antibodies, can be removed while retaining immunologically desirable gp120 structures.  相似文献   

10.
Site-specific mutagenesis was used to introduce amino acid substitutions at the asparagine codons of four conserved potential N-linked glycosylation sites within the gp120 envelope protein of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). One of these alterations resulted in the production of noninfectious virus particles. The amino acid substitution did not interfere with the synthesis, processing, and stability of the env gene polypeptides gp120 and gp41 or the binding of gp120 to its cellular receptor, the CD4 (T4) molecule. Vaccinia virus recombinants containing wild-type or mutant HIV env genes readily induced syncytia in CD4+ HeLa cells. These results suggest that alterations involving the second conserved domain of the HIV gp120 may interfere with an essential early step in the virus replication cycle other than binding to the CD4 receptor. In long-term cocultures of a T4+ lymphocyte cell line and colon carcinoma cells producing the mutant virus, revertant infectious virions were detected. Molecular characterization of two revertant proviral clones revealed the presence of the original mutation as well as a compensatory amino acid change in another region of HIV gp120.  相似文献   

11.
S Bour  F Boulerice    M A Wainberg 《Journal of virology》1991,65(12):6387-6396
Our results demonstrate that the formation of intracellular complexes between the envelope glycoprotein precursor gp160 of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 and CD4 is a major event, leading to the disappearance of CD4 at the cell surface of infected U937 cells. Using both productively and defectively infected clones of U937 cells, we assessed the effect of CD4-gp160 intracellular association on the maturation of both proteins. Pulse-chase labeling followed by sequential immunoprecipitation was used to analyze the processing of both free and associated CD4 and gp160, and the results showed that the trimming, proteolytic cleavage, and degradation of gp160 were completely abrogated after intracellular binding to CD4. Similarly, the maturation process which normally transforms 80% of CD4 to a partially endoglycosidase H-resistant species was also impaired subsequent to the formation of these complexes. A comparison of gp160 maturation either in free form or as a CD4 complex revealed that neither inefficient transport nor degradation of gp160 can account for the observed blockage of CD4 maturation. Moreover, this impairment was independent of gp120 and gp41, since a defective clone of human immunodeficiency virus type 1-infected cells, unable to cleave gp160, showed binding of CD4 and inhibition of CD4 transport and maturation with the same efficiency as occurred in productively infected cells. Expression of gp160 is thus necessary and sufficient to cause CD4 receptor down-modulation for both productively and defectively infected cells.  相似文献   

12.
BMS-806 and the related compound, #155, are novel inhibitors of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) entry that bind the gp120 exterior envelope glycoprotein. BMS-806 and #155 block conformational changes in the HIV-1 envelope glycoproteins that are induced by binding to the host cell receptor, CD4. We tested a panel of HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein mutants and identified several that were resistant to the antiviral effects of BMS-806 and #155. In the CD4-bound conformation of gp120, the amino acid residues implicated in BMS-806 and #155 resistance line the "phenylalanine 43 cavity" and a water-filled channel that extends from this cavity to the inner domain. Structural considerations suggest a model in which BMS-806 and #155 bind gp120 prior to receptor binding and, upon CD4 binding, are accommodated in the Phe-43 cavity and adjacent channel. The integrity of the nearby V1/V2 variable loops and N-linked carbohydrates on the V1/V2 stem indirectly influences sensitivity to the drugs. A putative binding site for BMS-806 and #155 between the gp120 receptor-binding regions and the inner domain, which is thought to interact with the gp41 transmembrane envelope glycoprotein, helps to explain the mode of action of these drugs.  相似文献   

13.
To examine the role of the glycans of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 transmembrane glycoprotein gp41, conserved glycosylation sites within the env sequence (Asn-621, Asn-630, and Asn-642) were mutated to Gln. The mutated and control wild-type env genes were introduced into recombinant vaccinia virus and used to infect BHK-21 or CD4+ CEM cells. Mutated gp41 appeared as a 35-kDa band in a Western blot (immunoblot), and it comigrated with the deglycosylated form of wild-type gp41. Proteolytic cleavage of the recombinant wild-type and mutant forms of the gp160 envelope glycoprotein precursor was analyzed by pulse-chase experiments and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay: gp160 synthesis was similar whether cells were infected with control or mutated env-expressing recombinant vaccinia virus, but about 10-fold less cleaved gp120 and gp41 was produced by the mutated construct than the control construct. The rates of gp120-gp41 cleavage at each of the two potential sites appeared to be comparable in the two constructs. By using a panel of antibodies specific for gp41 and gp120 epitopes, it was shown that the overall immunoreactivities of control and mutated gp41 proteins were similar but that reactivity to epitopes at the C and N termini of gp120, as present on gp160 produced by the mutated construct, was enhanced. This was no longer observed for cleaved gp120 in supernatants. Both gp120 proteins, from control and mutated env, were expressed on the cell surface under a cleaved form and could bind to membrane CD4, as determined by quantitative immunofluorescence assay. In contrast, and despite sufficient expression of env products at the cell membrane, gp41 produced by the mutated construct was unable to induce membrane fusion. Therefore, while contradictory results reported in the literature suggest that gp41 individual glycosylation sites are dispensable for the bioactivity and conformation of env products, it appears that such is not the case when the whole gp41 glycan cluster is removed.  相似文献   

14.
The gp120 envelope glycoprotein of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) promotes virus entry by sequentially binding CD4 and chemokine receptors on the target cell. Primary, clinical HIV-1 isolates require interaction with CD4 to allow gp120 to bind the CCR5 chemokine receptor efficiently. We adapted a primary HIV-1 isolate, ADA, to replicate in CD4-negative canine cells expressing human CCR5. The gp120 changes responsible for the adaptation were limited to alteration of glycosylation addition sites in the V2 loop-V1-V2 stem. The gp120 glycoproteins of the adapted viruses bound CCR5 directly, without prior interaction with CD4. Thus, a major function of CD4 binding in the entry of primary HIV-1 isolates can be bypassed by changes in the gp120 V1-V2 elements, which allow the envelope glycoproteins to assume a conformation competent for CCR5 binding.  相似文献   

15.
The envelope glycoprotein of human immunodeficiency virus type 2 (HIV-2) is primarily responsible for virus attachment and entry into the target cell population. We constructed an HIV-2 mutant virus containing an in-frame deletion within the putative CD4-binding sequences of the envelope glycoprotein and confirmed that the mutant envelope is unable to bind CD4 and that the mutant virus is noninfectious. To investigate whether this mutant could dominantly interfere with wild-type replication, we coexpressed proviral DNAs of both wild-type and mutant viruses in cells and assayed the production of infectious HIV-2 virions. Interference with virus replication was indeed observed with mutant DNA, and a maximal effect was achieved with 10-fold excess mutant DNA over wild-type DNA in the cotransfection experiments. The transdominant effect on virus replication does not appear to be at the level of wild-type envelope expression or gp120-CD4 interaction. Rather, the interference may be at the level of mixed-oligomer formation during progeny virus assembly and may occur by either destabilizing the multimeric structure of gp120 or forming a defective mixed multimeric gp120 which is unable to complete the receptor binding and/or postbinding events needed for infection.  相似文献   

16.
Carbohydrate-binding agents bind to the N-glycans of HIV-1 envelope gp120 and prevent viral entry. Carbohydrate-binding agents can select for mutant viruses with deleted envelope glycans. Not all glycosylation motifs are mutated to the same extent. Site-directed mutagenesis revealed that deletions destroying the highly conserved (260)NGS(262) glycosylation motif resulted in non-infectious virus particles. We observed a significant lower CD4 binding in the case of the N260Q mutant gp120 virus strains, caused by a strikingly lower expression of gp120 and gp41 in the virus particle. In addition, the mutant N260Q HIV-1 envelope expressed in 293T cells was unable to form syncytia in co-cultures with U87.CD4.CXCR4.CCR5 cells, due to the lower expression of envelope protein on the surface of the transfected 293T cells. The detrimental consequence of this N-glycan deletion on virus infectivity could not be compensated for by the creation of novel glycosylation sites near this amino acid, leaving this uncovered envelope epitope susceptible to neutralizing antibody binding. Thus, the Asn-260 glycan in the gp120 envelope of HIV-1 represents a hot spot for targeting suicidal drugs or antibodies in a therapeutic effort to efficiently neutralize a broad array of virus strains.  相似文献   

17.
Various roles for the viral receptor, CD4, have been proposed in facilitating human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) entry, including virion binding to the target cell and the induction of conformational changes in the viral envelope glycoproteins required for the membrane fusion reaction. Here, we compare the structural requirements in the CDR2-like loop of CD4 domain 1, the major contact site of the gp120 envelope glycoprotein, for gp120 binding and virus entry. For every CD4 mutant examined, the level of cell surface expression and the gp120 binding affinity were sufficient to explain the relative ability to function as a viral receptor. The decrease in relative infectibility associated with decreased gp120 binding affinity was more pronounced at lower cell surface CD4 concentrations. These results imply that both receptor density and affinity determine the efficiency of HIV-1 entry and that specific structures in the CD4 residues examined are probably not required for HIV-1 entry functions other than gp120 binding.  相似文献   

18.
The variable V1V2 and V3 regions of the human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1) envelope glycoprotein (gp120) can influence viral coreceptor usage. To substantiate this we generated isogenic HIV-1 molecularly cloned viruses that were composed of the HxB2 envelope backbone containing the V1V2 and V3 regions from viruses isolated from a patient progressing to disease. We show that the V3 amino acid charge per se had little influence on altering the virus coreceptor phenotype. The V1V2 region and its N-linked glycosylation degree were shown to confer CXCR4 usage and provide the virus with rapid replication kinetics. Loss of an N-linked glycosylation site within the V3 region had a major influence on the virus switching from the R5 to X4 phenotype in a V3 charge-dependent manner. The loss of this V3 N-linked glycosylation site was also linked with the broadening of the coreceptor repertoire to incorporate CCR3. By comparing the amino acid sequences of primary HIV-1 isolates, we identified a strong association between high V3 charge and the loss of this V3 N-linked glycosylation site. These results demonstrate that the N-linked glycosylation pattern of the HIV-1 envelope can strongly influence viral coreceptor utilization and the R5 to X4 switch.  相似文献   

19.
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) was adapted to replicate efficiently in cells expressing an altered form of the CD4 viral receptor. The mutant CD4 (46 K/D) contained a single amino acid change (lysine 46 to aspartic acid) in the CDR2 loop of domain 1, which results in a 15-fold reduction in affinity for the viral gp120 glycoprotein. The ability of the adapted virus to replicate in CD4 46 K/D-expressing cells was independently enhanced by single amino acid changes in the V2 variable loop, the V3 variable loop, and the fourth conserved (C4) region of the gp120 glycoprotein. Combinations of these amino acids in the same envelope glycoprotein resulted in additive enhancement of virus replication in cells expressing the CD4 46 K/D molecule. In cells expressing the wild-type CD4 glycoproteins, the same V2 and V3 residue changes also increased the efficiency of replication of a virus exhibiting decreased receptor-binding ability due to an amino acid change (aspartic acid 368 to glutamic acid) in the gp120 glycoprotein. In neither instance did the adaptive changes restore the binding ability of the monomeric gp120 glycoprotein or the oligomeric envelope glycoprotein complex for the mutant or wild-type CD4 glycoproteins, respectively. Thus, particular conformations of the gp120 V2 and V3 variable loops and of the C4 region allow postreceptor binding events in the membrane fusion process to occur in the context of less than optimal receptor binding. These results suggest that the fusion-related functions of the V2, V3, and C4 regions of gp120 are modulated by CD4 binding.  相似文献   

20.
Using PCR mutagenesis to disrupt the NXT/S N-linked glycosylation motif of the Env protein, we created 27 mutants lacking 1 to 5 of 14 N-linked glycosylation sites within regions of gp120 lying outside of variable loops 1 to 4 within simian immunodeficiency virus strain 239 (SIV239). Of 18 mutants missing N-linked glycosylation sites predicted to lie within 10 A of CD4 contact sites, the infectivity of 12 was sufficient to measure sensitivity to neutralization by soluble CD4 (sCD4), pooled immune sera from SIV239-infected rhesus macaques, and monoclonal antibodies known to neutralize certain derivatives of SIV239. Three of these 12 mutants (g3, lacking the 3rd glycan at position 79; g11, lacking the 11th glycan at position 212; and g3,11, lacking both the 3rd and 11th glycans) were approximately five times more sensitive to neutralization by sCD4 than wild-type (WT) SIV239. However, these same mutants were no more sensitive to neutralization than WT by pooled immune sera. The other 9 of 12 replication-competent mutants in this group were no more sensitive to neutralization than the WT by any of the neutralizing reagents. Six of the nine mutants that did not replicate appreciably had three or more glycosylation sites eliminated; the other three replication-deficient strains involved mutation of site 15. Our results suggest that elimination of glycan attachment sites 3 and 11 enhanced the exposure of contact residues for CD4. Thus, glycans at positions 3 and 11 of SIV239 gp120 may be particularly important for shielding the CD4-binding site from antibody recognition.  相似文献   

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