Although selected chemokines act as natural inhibitors of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, their inherent proinflammatory activity may limit a therapeutic use. To elucidate whether the antiviral and signaling functions of RANTES can be dissociated, several recombinant analogues mutated at the N terminus were generated and functionally compared with the wild-type (WT) molecule, as well as with three previously described mutants. Substitution of selected residues within the N-terminal region caused a marked loss of antiviral potency. By contrast, two unique analogues (C1.C5-RANTES and L-RANTES) exhibited an increased antiviral activity against different CXCR4-negative HIV-1 isolates grown in primary mononuclear cells or in macrophages. This enhanced HIV-blocking activity was associated with an increased binding affinity for CCR5. Both C1.C5-RANTES and L-RANTES showed a dramatically reduced ability to trigger intracellular calcium mobilization via CCR3 or CCR5, while potently antagonizing the action of the WT chemokine. By contrast, two previously described analogues (RANTES(3-68) and AOP-RANTES) maintained a WT ability to trigger CCR5-mediated signaling, while a third one (RANTES(9-68)) showed a dramatic loss of antiviral activity. These data demonstrate that the antiviral and signaling functions of RANTES can be uncoupled, opening new perspectives for the development of chemokine-based therapeutic approaches for HIV infection.

Enhancement of the HIV-1 inhibitory activity of RANTES by modification of the N-terminal region: dissociation from CCR5 activation / S. Polo, V. Nardese, C. De Santis, C. Arcelloni, R. Paroni, F. Sironi, A. Verani, M. Rizzi, M. Bolognesi, P. Lusso. - In: EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY. - ISSN 0014-2980. - 30:11(2000 Nov), pp. 3190-3198. [10.1002/1521-4141(200011)30:11<3190::AID-IMMU3190>3.0.CO;2-E]

Enhancement of the HIV-1 inhibitory activity of RANTES by modification of the N-terminal region: dissociation from CCR5 activation

S. Polo
Primo
;
R. Paroni;M. Bolognesi
Penultimo
;
2000

Abstract

Although selected chemokines act as natural inhibitors of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, their inherent proinflammatory activity may limit a therapeutic use. To elucidate whether the antiviral and signaling functions of RANTES can be dissociated, several recombinant analogues mutated at the N terminus were generated and functionally compared with the wild-type (WT) molecule, as well as with three previously described mutants. Substitution of selected residues within the N-terminal region caused a marked loss of antiviral potency. By contrast, two unique analogues (C1.C5-RANTES and L-RANTES) exhibited an increased antiviral activity against different CXCR4-negative HIV-1 isolates grown in primary mononuclear cells or in macrophages. This enhanced HIV-blocking activity was associated with an increased binding affinity for CCR5. Both C1.C5-RANTES and L-RANTES showed a dramatically reduced ability to trigger intracellular calcium mobilization via CCR3 or CCR5, while potently antagonizing the action of the WT chemokine. By contrast, two previously described analogues (RANTES(3-68) and AOP-RANTES) maintained a WT ability to trigger CCR5-mediated signaling, while a third one (RANTES(9-68)) showed a dramatic loss of antiviral activity. These data demonstrate that the antiviral and signaling functions of RANTES can be uncoupled, opening new perspectives for the development of chemokine-based therapeutic approaches for HIV infection.
chemokine; chemokine receptor; signal transduction; antiviral activity; HIV-1
Settore BIO/10 - Biochimica
Settore MED/04 - Patologia Generale
nov-2000
Article (author)
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/19737
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