Isolation of primary HIV-1 that target CD8+ T Lymphocytes using CD8 as a receptor

Author:  ["Kunal Saha","Jianchao Zhang","Anil Gupta","Rajnish Dave","Meron Yimen","Bouchra Zerhouni"]

Publication:  Nature Medicine

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Tags:     Medicine

Abstract

HIV-1 use CD4 receptors to infect their primary targets, CD4+ cells, whereas CD8+ cells have a protective role against HIV-1. We recently isolated HIV-1-producing CD8+ clones from two AIDS patients. Here we show that although HIV-1 produced by CD8+ cells maintained the ability to infect CD4+ cells, these viruses were able to infect CD8+ cells independent of CD4. Evidence indicates that these viruses used CD8 as a receptor to infect CD8+ cells. First, expression of CD8 was downmodulated after infection. Second, anti-CD8 antibodies blocked viral entry and replication in CD8+ cells. Finally, resistant cells became susceptible after expression of CD8. Although these viruses used CXCR4 to enter CD4+ cells, it seems that infection of CD8+ cells was independent of CXCR4 or CCR5 co-receptors. Novel changes were observed in envelope sequences of CD8-tropic viruses. These results provide initial evidence that HIV-1 can mutate to infect CD8+ cells using CD8 as a receptor.

Cite this article

Saha, K., Zhang, J., Gupta, A. et al. Isolation of primary HIV-1 that target CD8+ T Lymphocytes using CD8 as a receptor. Nat Med 7, 65–72 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1038/83365

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