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1.
In this work, molecular dynamics (MD) simulation of the interaction of three mutants, G3V, G5V and G10V, of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) gp41 16-residue fusion peptide (FP) with an explicit palmitoyloleoylphosphatidyl-ethanolamine (POPE) lipid bilayer was performed. The goals of this work are to study the correlation of the fusogenic activity of the FPs with the mode of their interaction with the bilayer and to examine the roles of the many glycine residues in the FP in the fusion process. The results of this work corroborate the main conclusion of our earlier MD work of the WT FP and several mutants with polar substitution. These two studies provide correlation between the mode of insertion and the fusogenic activity of these peptides and support the hypothesis that an oblique insertion of the fusion domain of the viral protein is required for fusogenic activity. Inactive mutants interact with the bilayer by a surface-binding mode. The results of this work, combined with the results of our earlier work, show that, while the secondary structures of the wild-type FP and its mutants do not affect the fusogenic activities, the conformational flexibility appears to be an important factor. The active WT FP and its partially active mutants, G3V and G5V, all have significant conformational transitions at one of the glycine sites. They occur at Gly(5) in FP-wt, at Gly(10) in FP-G5V and at Gly(13) in FP-G3V. Thus, a glycine site in each of these active (or partially active) FPs provides conformational flexibility. On the other hand, the inactive mutants FP-G10V, FP-L9R and FP-V2E do not have any conformational transitions except at either terminus and thus possess no conformational flexibility. Thus, the results of this work support the suggestion that the role of glycine residues in the fusion domain is to provide the necessary conformational flexibility for fusion activity.The glycines also form a "glycine strip" in the FP that locates on one (the less hydrophobic) face of the helix (the "sided helix"). However, whether this "glycine strip" is disrupted or not does not seem to correlate with the retention of fusogenic activities. Finally, although the FLGFL (8-12) motif is absolutely conserved in the HIV fusion domain, a well-structured motif stabilized by hydrogen bonding does not appear to be required for activity. In fact, hydrogen bonding in this motif was found to be missing in FP-G3V and FP-G5V. Both of these mutants are partially active.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The V3 loop from HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein gp120 is involved in viral entry and determines the cellular tropism and HIV-1-induced cell-cell fusion. Earlier we have shown that V3 loop peptides representing the sequences of syncytia-inducing HIV strains have high membranotropic activity. These peptides caused the lysis of liposomes of various lipid compositions, could fuse negatively charged liposomes and induced hemolysis of erythrocytes. In contrast, peptides mimicking the sequences of non-syncytia-inducing viruses showed no lytic or fusion activities at the same concentrations. Now we have found that the V3 loop synthetic peptides containing the conserved GPGR region, derived from T-lymphotropic strains (BRU and MN), as opposed to peptides containing the GPGQ region, are able to cause a pronounced membrane permeabilization (dissipation of the ΔpH and the Δψ) of human peripheral blood lymphocytes, erythrocytes and plasma membrane vesicles at micromolar concentrations with a dose-dependent kinetics. Analysis of the secondary structures of the peptides by circular dichroism revealed conformational changes in V3 loop peptides depending on solvent hydrophobicity: from random coil in water to an α-helix/β-sheet conformation in trifluoroethanol. Such structural changes of the V3 loop together with the membrane insertion of the gp41 N-terminal fusion peptide may promote the formation of the fusion pore during virus-cell fusion.  相似文献   

3.
The interfacial sequence DKWASLWNWFNITNWLWYIK, preceding the transmembrane anchor of gp41 glycoprotein subunit, has been shown to be essential for fusion activity and incorporation into virions. HIV(c), a peptide representing this region, formed lytic pores in liposomes composed of the main lipids occurring in the human immunodeficiency virus, type 1 (HIV-1), envelope, i.e. 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoylphosphatidylcholine (POPC):sphingomyelin (SPM):cholesterol (Chol) (1:1:1 mole ratio), at low (>1:10,000) peptide-to-lipid mole ratio, and promoted the mixing of vesicular lipids at >1:1000 peptide-to-lipid mole ratios. Inclusion of SPM or Chol in POPC membranes had different effects. Whereas SPM sustained pore formation, Chol promoted fusion activity. Even if partitioning into membranes was not affected in the absence of both SPM and Chol, HIV(c) had virtually no effect on POPC vesicles. Conditions described to disturb occurrence of lateral separation of phases in these systems reproduced the high peptide-dose requirements for leakage as found in pure POPC vesicles and inhibited fusion. Surface aggregation assays using rhodamine-labeled peptides demonstrated that SPM and Chol promoted HIV(c) self-aggregation in membranes. Employing head-group fluorescent phospholipid analogs in planar supported lipid layers, we were able to discern HIV(c) clusters associated to ordered domains. Our results support the notion that the pretransmembrane sequence may participate in the clustering of gp41 monomers within the HIV-1 envelope, and in bilayer architecture destabilization at the loci of fusion.  相似文献   

4.
The envelope proteins, gp 120 and gp41 of HIV-1, play a crucial role in receptor (CD4+ lymphocytes) binding and membrane fusion. The fragment 254-274 of gp120 is conserved in all strains of HIV and, as a part of the full gp120 protein, behaves as 'immunosilent', but as an individual fragment it is 'immunoreactive'. When this fragment binds to its receptor, it activates the fusion domain of gp41 allowing viral entry into the host CD4+ cells. The conformation of fragment 254-274 of the gp120 domain and fragment 519-541 of the gp41 domain was studied by NMR and MD simulations. The studies were carried out in three varied media--water, DMSO-d6 and hexafluoroacetone (HFA). The fusogenic nature of the gp41 domain peptide was investigated by 31P NMR experiments with model bilayers prepared from dimyristoyl-L-alpha-phosphatidylcholine (DMPC). The solvent was seen to exert a major effect on the structure of the two peptides. Fragment (254-274) of gp120 in DMSO-d6 had a type I beta-turn around the tetrad Val9-Ser10-Thr11-Gln12 while in HFA a helical structure spanning the region Ile5 to Gln12 was seen with the remaining part of the peptide in a random coil structure. It is possible that the beta-turn may constitute an initiation site for the formation of the helix. In water at pH 4.5, the peptide adopted a beta-sheet. The NMR results for fragment 519-541 of gp41 are conclusive of a beta-sheet structure in DMSO-d6, a conformation which may help in insertion into the membrane, a notion also put forward by others. The 31P NMR studies of DMPC vesicles with this fragment show its fusogenic nature, promoting fusion of unilamellar vesicles to larger agglomerates like multilamellar ones.  相似文献   

5.
The binding by HIV-1 gp120 to CD4 and a chemokine receptor activates the membrane fusion glycoprotein, gp41. The fusion function of gp41 involves the refolding of its core into a 6-helix bundle, which apposes the lipophilic termini (the fusion peptide and transmembrane domain) and the associated cell and viral membranes, leading to their fusion. In this study, we examined the functional role of the polar segment and membrane proximal external region (MPER), which link the fusion peptide and transmembrane domain, respectively, to the core domain and interact to form a terminal clasp adjacent to the core. Limited proteolysis indicated that the terminal clasp is destabilized by simultaneous I535A/V539G mutations within the polar segment and mutations within the MPER. The destabilizing effects of I535A/V539G correlated with defective cell-cell fusion, viral entry, and viral replication. By using lipophilic and cytoplasmic fluorescent dye transfer assays, we found that terminal clasp destabilization is linked to a block in the lipid mixing/hemifusion phase of the membrane fusion cascade. Because the biosynthesis of the prefusion gp120-gp41 complex did not appear to be affected by I535A/V539G, we infer that the hemifusion block is due to a specific effect on the trimer of hairpins conformation of gp41. By contrast, the decreased fusion function of the MPER mutants correlated with a decrease in the interfacial hydropathy of the MPER sequence, suggesting that the prefusion Env complex had been adversely affected in these cases. These findings reveal a novel conserved functional target for the discovery of fusion inhibitors.  相似文献   

6.
Early pregnancy associated protein-1 (Epap-1), a 90 kDa glycoprotein present in first trimester placental tissue, inhibits HIV-1 entry through interaction with HIV-1 gp120 at V3 and C5 regions. In the present study, we have identified the specific 32 mer region of Epap-1 that can interact with V3 loop. This was achieved by docking between Epap-1 molecular model and gp120 and studying the interaction of peptides with gp120 in vitro. Out of four peptides analyzed, two peptides (P-2 and P-3) showed significant interaction with V3 domain (N = 8; N = 7) of gp120. In the studies conducted using soluble gp120 and virus, peptide P-2 has shown conserved interaction at V3 loop regions recognized by 257D and F425 antibodies and higher anti-viral activity. Also, P-2 inhibited cell fusion mediated dye transfer between gp120 expressing HL2/3 and CD4 expressing Sup T1 cells suggesting its inhibition of viral entry, which is further confirmed by its action on HIV infection mediated by Tat activated beta gal expression in TZM-bl cells. Further optimization of P-2 peptide showed that the anti-viral activity and gp120 interaction residues lie in the N-terminal region of the peptide. These results together suggest that P-2 inhibits viral entry through specific interaction at V3 loop region.  相似文献   

7.
The immune response to viral glycoproteins is often directed against conformation- and/or glycosylation-dependent structures; synthetic peptides and bacterially expressed proteins are inadequate probes for the mapping of such epitopes. This report describes a retroviral vector system that presents such native epitopes on chimeric glycoproteins in which protein fragments of interest are fused to the C terminus of the N-terminal domain of the murine leukemia virus surface protein, gp70. The system was used to express two disulfide-bonded domains from gp120, the surface protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), that include potent neutralization epitopes. The resulting fusion glycoproteins were synthesized at high levels and were efficiently transported and secreted. A fusion protein containing the HXB2 V1/V2 domain was recognized by an HIVIIIB-infected patient serum as well as by 17 of 36 HIV-1 seropositive hemophiliac, homosexual male and intravenous drug user patient sera. Many of these HIV+ human sera reacted with V1/V2 domains from several HIV-1 clones expressed in fusion glycoproteins, indicating the presence of cross-reactive antibodies against epitopes in the V1/V2 domain. Recognition of gp(1-263):V1/V2HXB2 by the HIVIIIB-infected human patient serum was largely blocked by synthetic peptides matching V1 but not V2 sequences, while recognition of this construct by a broadly cross-reactive hemophiliac patient serum was not blocked by individual V1 or V2 peptides or by mixtures of these peptides. A construct containing the V3 domain of the IIIB strain of HIV-1, gp(1-263):V3HXB2, was recognized by sera from a human and a chimpanzee that had been infected by HIVIIIB but not by sera from hemophiliac patients who had been infected with HIV-1 of MN-like V3 serotype. The reactive sera had significantly higher titers when assayed against gp(1-263):V3HXB2 than when assayed against matching V3 peptides. Immunoprecipitation of this fusion glycoprotein by the human serum was only partially blocked by V3 peptide, indicating that this infected individual produced antibodies against epitopes in V3 that were expressed on the fusion glycoprotein but not by synthetic peptides. These data demonstrated that the chimeric glycoproteins described here effectively present native epitopes present in the V1/V2 and V3 domains of gp120 and provide efficient methods for detection of antibodies directed against native epitopes in these regions and for characterization of such epitopes.  相似文献   

8.
The V3 loop of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 surface envelope glycoprotein gp120 is a sphingolipid-binding domain mediating the attachment of HIV-1 to plasma membrane microdomains (rafts). Sphingolipid-induced conformational changes in gp120 are required for HIV-1 fusion. Galactosylceramide and sphingomyelin have been detected in highly purified preparations of prion rods, suggesting that the prion protein (PrP) may interact with selected sphingolipids. Moreover, a major conformational transition of the Alzheimer beta-amyloid peptide has been observed upon interaction with sphingolipid-containing membranes. Structure similarity searches with the combinatorial extension method revealed the presence of a V3-like domain in the human prion protein PrP and in the Alzheimer beta-amyloid peptide. In each case, synthetic peptides derived from the predicted V3-like domain were found to interact with monomolecular films of galactosylceramide and sphingomyelin at the air-water interface. The V3-like domain of PrP is a disulfide-linked loop (Cys(179)-Cys(214)) that includes the E200K mutation site associated with familial Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. This mutation abrogated sphingomyelin recognition. The identification of a common sphingolipid-binding motif in gp120, PrP, and beta-amyloid peptide underscores the role of lipid rafts in the pathogenesis of HIV-1, Alzheimer, and prion diseases and may provide new therapeutic strategies.  相似文献   

9.
The human immunodeficiency virus, type 1 (HIV-1) gp41 core plays an important role in fusion between viral and target cell membranes. A single chain polypeptide, N36(L8)C34, which forms a six-helix bundle in physiological solution, can be used as a model of gp41 core. Here we identified from a 12-mer phage peptide library a positive phage clone displaying a peptide sequence with high binding activity to the HIV-1 gp41 core. The peptide sequence contains a putative gp41-binding motif, PhiXXXXPhiXPhi (X is any amino acid residue, and Phi is any one of the aromatic amino acid residues Trp, Phe, or Tyr). This motif also exists in the scaffolding domain of caveolin-1 (Cav-1), a known gp41-binding protein. Cav-1-(61-101) and Cav-1-(82-101), two recombinant fusion proteins containing the Cav-1 scaffolding domain, bound significantly to the gp41 expressed in mammalian cells and interacted with the polypeptide N36(L8)C34. These results suggest that the scaffolding domain of Cav-1 may bind to the gp41 core via the motif. This interaction may be essential for formation of fusion pore or endocytosis of HIV-1 and affect the pathogenesis of HIV-1 infection. Further characterization of the gp41 core-binding motifs may shed light on the alternative mechanism by which HIV-1 enters into the target cell.  相似文献   

10.
Dimitrov AS  Rawat SS  Jiang S  Blumenthal R 《Biochemistry》2003,42(48):14150-14158
The N-terminal fusion peptide and the interfacial sequence preceding the transmembrane anchor of HIV-1 gp41 are required for viral fusion. Studies with synthetic peptides indicated that these regions function by destabilizing membranes, which is regarded as a crucial step in the membrane fusion reaction. However, it is not clear whether membrane destabilization is induced by these sequences in the intact gp41. We address this question by examining fusion and destabilization of membranes expressing HIV-1(IIIB) wild-type Env and two mutant Envs. (1) A Glu residue at position 2 of the gp41 fusion peptide is substituted for Val (V2E) to produce one mutant. (2) Residues 665-682 in the membrane-proximal domain are deleted to form the other. The process of membrane destabilization was monitored by the influx of Sytox, an impermeant fluorescent dye, into the Env-expressing cells following the interaction with CD4-CXCR4 complexes, and fusion was monitored by observing dye transfer between Env-expressing cells and appropriate target cells. We also monitored the conformational changes in the Envs following their interactions with CD4 and CXCR4 by immunofluorescence using an anti-gp41 mAb that reacts with the six-helix bundle. In contrast to the wild type, both Env mutants did not mediate cell fusion. The V2E Env did not mediate membrane destabilization. However, the Env with an unmodified fusion peptide but with a deletion of residues 665-682 in the membrane-proximal domain did mediate membrane destabilization. The wild type and both mutant Envs undergo conformational changes detected by the anti-gp41 six-helix bundle mAbs. Our results suggest that in intact HIV-1 Env the membrane-proximal domain is not required for membrane perturbations, but rather enables the bending of gp41 that is required for viral and target membranes to come together. Moreover, the observation that the Delta665-683 Env self-inserts its fusion peptide but does not cause fusion suggests that self-insertion of the fusion peptide is not sufficient for HIV-1 Env-mediated fusion.  相似文献   

11.
A phase peptide library was screened with virus-neutralizing monoclonal antibodies (MCA) 2F5 which recognize a conserved epitope of HIV-1 gp41. Phages that expose peptides specifically binding with MCA 2F5 were selected by ELISA. Amino acid sequence analysis revealed a homology to region 662-671 of HIV-1 HB10 gp160 for most peptides. The major role in recognition was ascribed to Asp-664, Lys-665, and Trp-666. The epitope-mimicking peptides were tested for immunogenicity. Antibodies to gp41 were detected in serum of immunized rabbits.  相似文献   

12.
Shu W  Liu J  Ji H  Radigen L  Jiang S  Lu M 《Biochemistry》2000,39(7):1634-1642
The HIV-1 gp41 envelope protein mediates membrane fusion that leads to virus entry into the cell. The core structure of fusion-active gp41 is a six-helix bundle in which an N-terminal three-stranded coiled coil is surrounded by a sheath of antiparallel C-terminal helices. A conserved glutamine (Gln 652) buried in this helical interface replaced by leucine increases HIV-1 infectivity. To define the basis for this enhanced membrane fusion activity, we investigate the role of the Gln 652 to Leu substitution on the conformation, stability, and biological activity of the N34(L6)C28 model of the gp41 ectodomain core. The 2.0 A resolution crystal structure of the mutant molecule shows that the Leu 652 side chains make prominent contacts with hydrophobic grooves on the surface of the central coiled coil. The Gln 652 to Leu mutation leads to a marginal stabilization of the six-helix bundle by -0.8 kcal/mol, evaluated from thermal unfolding experiments. Strikingly, the mutant N34(L6)C28 peptide is a potent inhibitor of HIV-1 infection, with 10-fold greater activity than the wild-type molecule. This inhibitory potency can be traced to the corresponding C-terminal mutant peptide that likely has greater potential to interact with the coiled-coil trimer. These results provide strong evidence that conserved interhelical packing interactions in the gp41 core are important determinants of HIV-1 entry and its inhibition. These interactions also offer a test-bed for the development of more potent analogues of gp41 peptide inhibitors.  相似文献   

13.
Recently, in sera of HIV infected individuals, antibodies recognizing nonimmunogenic C-terminal domain of the second conserved region of HIV-1 gp120 were identified (1). These antibodies are significantly more prevalent in asymptomatic carriers than in AIDS patients (1). Here we reported striking spectral and sequence homologies between human vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) and the conserved peptide derived from HIV-1 gp120 which binds these antibodies. The possible consequences of these findings on therapy and prevention of AIDS are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Soluble peptides derived from the C-terminal heptad repeat domain of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) gp41 are potent inhibitors of HIV-1 entry and gp41-induced fusion. Target membrane-anchored variants of these peptides have been shown to retain inhibitory activity. Both soluble and membrane-anchored C peptides (MACs) are thought to block fusion by binding to the N-terminal coiled coil domain of gp41 and preventing formation of the final six-helix bundle structure. However, interactions of target MACs with gp41 must be restricted to a subset of trimers that have their hydrophobic fusion peptides inserted into the target membrane. This unique feature of MACs was used to identify the intermediate step of fusion at which gp41 engaged the target membrane. Fusion between HIV envelope-expressing effector cells and target cells was measured by fluorescence microscopy. Expression of MACs in target cells led to less than twofold reduction in the extent of fusion. However, when reaction was first arrested by adding lysolipids that disfavored membrane merger, and the lipids were subsequently removed by washing, control cells supported fusion, whereas those that expressed MACs did not. The drastically improved potency of MACs implies that, at lipid-arrested stage, gp41 bridges the viral and target cell membranes and therefore more optimally binds the membrane-anchored peptides. Experimental demonstration of this intermediate shows that, similar to fusion induced by many other viral glycoproteins, engaging the target membrane by HIV-1 gp41 permits coupling between six-helix bundle formation and membrane merger.  相似文献   

15.
The glycoprotein (G) of vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) is responsible for binding of virus to cells and for mediating virus entry following endocytosis by inducing fusion of the viral envelope with the endosomal membrane. The fusion peptide of G is internal (residues 116 to 137) and exhibits characteristics similar to those of other internal fusion peptides, but recent studies have implicated the region adjacent to the transmembrane domain as also being important for G-mediated membrane fusion. Sequence alignment of the membrane-proximal region of G from several different vesiculoviruses revealed that this domain is highly conserved, suggesting that it is important for G function. Mutational analysis was used to show that this region is not essential for G protein oligomerization, transport to the cell surface, or incorporation into virus particles but that it is essential for acid-induced membrane fusion activity and for virus infectivity. Deletion of the 13 membrane-proximal amino acids (N449 to W461) dramatically reduced cell-cell fusion activity and reduced virus infectivity approximately 100-fold, but mutation of conserved aromatic residues (W457, F458, and W461) either singly or together had only modest effects on cell-cell fusion activity; recombinant virus encoding these mutants replicated as efficiently as wild-type (WT) VSV. Insertion of heterologous sequences in the juxtamembrane region completely abolished membrane fusion activity and virus infectivity, as did deletion of residues F440 to N449. The insertion mutants showed some changes in pH-dependent conformational changes and in virus binding, which could partially explain the defects in membrane fusion activity, but all the other mutants were similar to WT G with respect to conformational changes and virus binding. These data support the hypothesis that the membrane-proximal domain contributes to G-mediated membrane fusion activity, yet the conserved aromatic residues are not essential for membrane fusion or virus infectivity.  相似文献   

16.
The fusion-active HIV-1 gp41 core structure is a stable six-helix bundle (6-HB) formed by its N- and C-terminal heptad-repeat sequences (NHR and CHR). A highly conserved, deep hydrophobic cavity on the surface of the N-helical trimer is important for stability of the 6-HB and serves as an ideal target for developing anti-human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) fusion inhibitors. We have recently identified several small molecule HIV-1 fusion inhibitors that bind to the gp41 cavity through hydrophobic and ionic interactions and block the gp41 6-HB formation. Molecular docking analysis reveals that these small molecules fit inside the hydrophobic cavity and interact with positively charged residue Lys574 to form a conserved salt bridge. In this study, the functionality of Lys574 has been finely characterized by mutational analysis and biophysical approaches. We found that substitutions of Lys574 with non-conserved residues (K574D, K574E, and K574V) could completely abolish virus infectivity. With a set of wild-type and mutant N36 peptides derived from the NHR sequence as a model, we demonstrated that non-conservative Lys574 substitutions severely impaired the stability and conformation of 6-HBs as detected by circular dichroism spectroscopy, native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The binding affinity of N36 mutants bearing non-conservative Lys574 substitutions to the peptide C34 derived from the CHR sequence dramatically decreased as measured by isothermal titration calorimetry. These substitutions also significantly reduced the potency of N-peptides to inhibit HIV-1 infection. Collectively, these data suggest that conserved Lys574 plays a critical role in 6-HB formation and HIV-1 infectivity, and may serve as an important target for designing anti-HIV drugs.  相似文献   

17.
The third variable (V3) domain of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) external membrane glycoprotein gp120 is of crucial importance in eliciting neutralizing antibodies in infected persons. Polyclonal (PAb) and monoclonal (MAb) antibodies directed against selected epitopes in the V3 domain are valuable tools for analysis of the involvement of such sequences in neutralization and for definition of the relation between amino acid variability and immunological cross-reactions. The aim of this study was to obtain such site-specific antibodies. By using synthetic peptides derived from the V3 domain, a group-specific neutralizing PAb, two high-affinity HIV-1 IIIB neutralizing MAb, and two nonneutralizing MAb were raised. A 15-amino-acid peptide overlapping the tip of the V3 domain of HIV-1 MN was used to produce a rabbit PAb (W0/07). This PAb inhibited syncytium formation induced by HIV-1 IIIB and four field isolates. A similar IIIB-derived peptide was used to generate two murine immunoglobulin G1 (IgG1) MAb (IIIB-V3-13 and IIIB-V3-34). Pepscan analysis mapped the binding site of IIIB-V3-34 to the sequence IRIQRGPGR. The Kds of IIIB-V3-13 and IIIB-V3-34 for gp120 were 6.8 x 10(-11) and 1.6 x 10(-10) M, respectively. These MAb neutralized IIIB but not MN and inhibited syncytium formation induced by IIIB. They are applicable in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays, immunocytochemistry, and flow cytometry. A peptide covering the left base of the V3 domain was used to generate two murine IgG1 MAb (IIIB-V3-21 and IIIB-V3-26). The binding site of IIIB-V3-21 was mapped to the sequence INCTRPN. These MAb did not neutralize HIV-1 and did not inhibit syncytium formation. This study supports the notion that HIV-1 neutralizing antibodies suitable for multiassay performance can be obtained with synthetic peptides and that high-affinity MAb can be generated. Such site-specific antibodies are useful reagents in the analysis of HIV-1 neutralization. In addition, the cross-neutralization of different viral strains by PAb generated through single-peptide immunization is directly relevant to vaccine development.  相似文献   

18.
In this work, molecular dynamics (MD) simulation of the interaction of three mutants, G3V, G5V and G10V, of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) gp41 16-residue fusion peptide (FP) with an explicit palmitoyloleoylphosphatidyl-ethanolamine (POPE) lipid bilayer was performed. The goals of this work are to study the correlation of the fusogenic activity of the FPs with the mode of their interaction with the bilayer and to examine the roles of the many glycine residues in the FP in the fusion process. The results of this work corroborate the main conclusion of our earlier MD work of the WT FP and several mutants with polar substitution. These two studies provide correlation between the mode of insertion and the fusogenic activity of these peptides and support the hypothesis that an oblique insertion of the fusion domain of the viral protein is required for fusogenic activity. Inactive mutants interact with the bilayer by a surface-binding mode. The results of this work, combined with the results of our earlier work, show that, while the secondary structures of the wild-type FP and its mutants do not affect the fusogenic activities, the conformational flexibility appears to be an important factor. The active WT FP and its partially active mutants, G3V and G5V, all have significant conformational transitions at one of the glycine sites. They occur at Gly5 in FP-wt, at Gly10 in FP-G5V and at Gly13 in FP-G3V. Thus, a glycine site in each of these active (or partially active) FPs provides conformational flexibility. On the other hand, the inactive mutants FP-G10V, FP-L9R and FP-V2E do not have any conformational transitions except at either terminus and thus possess no conformational flexibility. Thus, the results of this work support the suggestion that the role of glycine residues in the fusion domain is to provide the necessary conformational flexibility for fusion activity.The glycines also form a “glycine strip” in the FP that locates on one (the less hydrophobic) face of the helix (the “sided helix”). However, whether this “glycine strip” is disrupted or not does not seem to correlate with the retention of fusogenic activities. Finally, although the FLGFL (8-12) motif is absolutely conserved in the HIV fusion domain, a well-structured motif stabilized by hydrogen bonding does not appear to be required for activity. In fact, hydrogen bonding in this motif was found to be missing in FP-G3V and FP-G5V. Both of these mutants are partially active.  相似文献   

19.
A phage peptide library was screened with virus-neutralizing monoclonal antibodies (MAb) 2F5 which recognize a conserved epitope of HIV-1 gp41. Phages that expose peptides specifically binding with MAb 2F5 were selected by ELISA. Amino acid sequence analysis revealed homology to region 662–671 of HIV-1 HB10 gp160 for most peptides. The major role in recognition was ascribed to Asp-664, Lys-665, and Trp-666. The epitope-mimicking peptides were tested for immunogenicity. Antibodies to gp41 were detected in the serum of immunized rabbits.  相似文献   

20.
The reactivity of antibodies with dimeric and monomelic peptide antigens was compared by ELISA. A panel of highly purified synthetic peptides of HIV-1 representing defined regions, 598–609 and 524 533 (fusion domain) of gp41 and 306–320 of gpl20, were used as antigens in the ELISA. These peptides were selected and synthesized taking into account the level of sequence conservation of various strains and hydrophilicity. The analysis included sera from 52 HIV-1 infected individuals and 53 HIV-1 negative controls. Both peptides from gp41 were found to be particularly immunoreactive with sera from HIV-1 infected individuals. The frequency of reactivity to the selected peptide from gp120 (V3 loop) in infected individuals was 82%. An interesting observation was that the dimeric peptide antigens had a detection rate more than 4-fold higher than the monomeric antigens. We found that lower levels of antibodies could be detected with dimeric antigens. The peptides reacted with few sera other than HIV-1 positive sera. These results implicate the potential dimeric peptide antigens to be utilized in the serodiagnosis of HIV-1 infection.  相似文献   

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