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NEW HIV RECEPTOR, NEW HOPE By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence
VANCOUVER (July 11,'96)
The identification of a new receptor
protein required for HIV infection could open up a new avenue in
AIDS therapy research, report researchers at the XIth
International AIDS Conference.
In order for HIV to enter and infect a cell, it must interact
with at least two proteins on the surface of the cell. One of
these receptor proteins, called CD4, has been known to
scientists for some time. A second protein called fusin,
however, used by the strains of HIV associated with late-stage
infection and overt AIDS diseases, was only recently identified.
Researchers have now identified a second set of cofactors
required by HIV for entry into immune cells. A series of these
cells surface proteins, called CKR2b, CKR3, and CKR5 have
recently been described.
"Discovery of these proteins opens up whole new ways of trying
to prevent HIV infection by blocking the virus from getting into
the cell in the first place," says Robert W. Doms, MD, PhD,
University of Pennsylvania.
"We can isolate viruses from patients now and very quickly find
out which cofactors their viruses use. We'll then be able to
try to develop agents that will interfere with those
interactions that lead to infection," he notes.
The strains of HIV studied by Doms and his team infect
macrophage cells and are known as the M-tropic strains. The
viruses that use fusin as an infection cofactor are referred to
as the T-tropic strains because of their predilection for
infecting T cells.
The Penn researchers have also isolated a dual-tropic virus
strain called 89.6 that is able to use either CKR5 or fusin as a
cofactor with CD4 to enter a cell. All other virus strains
studied thus far use one or the other cofactor, but not both.
Doms suggests that 89.6 may offer important clues about the
well-known propensity of HIV to mutate within the body and about
the progression from infection to disease.
The newly identified proteins also function as receptors for
several members of a group of inflammatory-response biochemicals
called chemokines. The "CKR" designation of the proteins is
scientific shorthand for "chemokine receptor." Several of these
chemokines, called RANTES, MIP1-alpha, and MIP1-beta, have been
shown to have significant antiviral effects in their own right.
In the lab, these chemokines are found to suppress the
early-stage M-tropic viruses, but not the T-tropic viruses.
This suggests that the body responds to initial HIV infection
with these chemokines that block the CKR series cofactors
associated with M-tropic viruses. As a result, HIV viruses that
mutate to be able to use other cofactors to enter cells would
have a survival advantage. The dual-tropic 89.6 strain may
represent a transitional type of virus in the evolution of HIV
within the body.
"By accumulating just a handful of mutations, the virus might
acquire the ability to use fusin in addition to CKR5," Doms
speculates. "Then it might continue to evolve to the point
where it uses just fusin."
"There are many different virus strains, and different viruses
can infect different cells. I suspect what will turn out to be
the case is that all of these viruses use different combinations
of these cofactors. This could explain why some viruses are
more aggressive than others and why some people progress to
disease much more quickly than other people," he added.
Doms adds that, with the new cofactors in hand, scientists may
now be able to develop transgenic research animals susceptible
to HIV infection. The availability of such animals could
dramatically boost drug-intervention and other studies of HIV
infection.
Dom's research appeared in the June 28, '96 issue of Cell.
Related information on the
Internet
XIth
International AIDS Conference
JAMA
HIV Info.
HIV
Replication Primer
HIV Pathogenesis
YAHOO AIDS DIRECTORY
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