نتایج جستجو برای: ccr5

تعداد نتایج: 4196  

Journal: :Journal of immunology 2006
Bing Ma Wei Liu Robert J Homer Patty J Lee Anthony J Coyle Jose M Lora Chun Geun Lee Jack A Elias

IL-13 is a major effector at sites of Th2 inflammation and tissue remodeling. In these locations, it frequently coexists with the CCR5 chemokine receptor and its ligands MIP-1alpha/CCL3 and MIP-1beta/CCL4. We hypothesized that CCR5 induction and activation play important roles in the pathogenesis of IL-13-induced tissue responses. To test this hypothesis, we evaluated the effects of IL-13 on th...

2009
Reem Berro Rogier W. Sanders Min Lu Per J. Klasse John P. Moore

HIV-1 variants resistant to small molecule CCR5 inhibitors recognize the inhibitor-CCR5 complex, while also interacting with free CCR5. The most common genetic route to resistance involves sequence changes in the gp120 V3 region, a pathway followed when the primary isolate CC1/85 was cultured with the AD101 inhibitor in vitro, creating the CC101.19 resistant variant. However, the D1/86.16 escap...

Journal: :The Journal of clinical investigation 1997
O J Cohen M Vaccarezza G K Lam B F Baird K Wildt P M Murphy P A Zimmerman T B Nutman C H Fox S Hoover J Adelsberger M Baseler J Arthos R T Davey R L Dewar J Metcalf D J Schwartzentruber J M Orenstein S Buchbinder A J Saah R Detels J Phair C Rinaldo J B Margolick G Pantaleo A S Fauci

HIV-1-infected long-term nonprogressors are a heterogeneous group of individuals with regard to immunologic and virologic markers of HIV-1 disease. CC chemokine receptor 5 (CCR5) has recently been identified as an important coreceptor for HIV-1 entry into CD4+ T cells. A mutant allele of CCR5 confers a high degree of resistance to HIV-1 infection in homozygous individuals and partial protection...

2014
Ayanna J. Flegler Gianguido C. Cianci Thomas J. Hope

CCR5 acts as the principal coreceptor during HIV-1 transmission and early stages of infection. Efficient HIV-1 entry requires a series of processes, many dependent on the conformational state of both viral envelope protein and cellular receptor. Monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) are able to identify different CCR5 conformations, allowing for their use as probes to distinguish CCR5 populations. Not a...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2013
Reem Berro Anila Yasmeen Ravinder Abrol Bartosz Trzaskowski Sarya Abi-Habib Amy Grunbeck Danny Lascano William A Goddard Per Johan Klasse Thomas P Sakmar John P Moore

Small-molecule CCR5 inhibitors such as vicriviroc (VVC) and maraviroc (MVC) are allosteric modulators that impair HIV-1 entry by stabilizing a CCR5 conformation that the virus recognizes inefficiently. Viruses resistant to these compounds are able to bind the inhibitor-CCR5 complex while also interacting with the free coreceptor. CCR5 also interacts intracellularly with G proteins, as part of i...

Journal: :Blood 2006
Claudia Pastori Barbara Weiser Claudia Barassi Caterina Uberti-Foppa Silvia Ghezzi Renato Longhi Giliola Calori Harold Burger Kimdar Kemal Guido Poli Adriano Lazzarin Lucia Lopalco

Exposure to HIV-1 does not necessarily result in infection and progression toward disease, thus suggesting that the control of viral infection may be achieved. Antibodies to CCR5 have been detected in HIV-exposed but uninfected subjects (ESNs); thus, these antibodies could be involved in HIV protection. To assess whether anti-CCR5 antibodies may also contribute to slow HIV disease progression, ...

2013
Lijing Li Ludmila Krymskaya Jianbin Wang Jill Henley Anitha Rao Lan-Feng Cao Chy-Anh Tran Monica Torres-Coronado Agnes Gardner Nancy Gonzalez Kenneth Kim Pei-Qi Liu Ursula Hofer Evan Lopez Philip D Gregory Qing Liu Michael C Holmes Paula M Cannon John A Zaia David L DiGiusto

The HIV-1 coreceptor CCR5 is a validated target for HIV/AIDS therapy. The apparent elimination of HIV-1 in a patient treated with an allogeneic stem cell transplant homozygous for a naturally occurring CCR5 deletion mutation (CCR5(Δ32/Δ32)) supports the concept that a single dose of HIV-resistant hematopoietic stem cells can provide disease protection. Given the low frequency of naturally occur...

2017
Peiying Li Long Wang Yuxi Zhou Yu Gan Wen Zhu Yuguo Xia Xiaoyan Jiang Simon Watkins Alberto Vazquez Angus W. Thomson Jun Chen Weifeng Yu Xiaoming Hu

BACKGROUND Despite recent evidence demonstrating a potent protective effect of adoptively transferred regulatory T cells (Tregs) in ischemic stroke, the mechanism for Treg mobilization and activation in the ischemic brain is, remarkably, unknown. This study determines the role of C-C chemokine receptor type 5 (CCR5) in mediating the docking and activation of transferred Tregs in their protectio...

Journal: :Journal of immunology 2006
Yuji Saita Eiichi Kodama Masaya Orita Mitsuhiro Kondo Takahiro Miyazaki Kenji Sudo Keiko Kajiwara Masao Matsuoka Yasuaki Shimizu

The chemokine receptor CCR5 is an attractive target for HIV-1 drug development, as individuals whose cells lack surface CCR5 expression are highly resistant to HIV-1 infection. CCR5 ligands, such as CCL5/RANTES, effectively inhibit HIV-1 infection by competing for binding opportunities to the CCR5 and inducing its internalization. However, the inherent proinflammatory activity of the chemotacti...

Journal: :Current Biology 1998
Emil Palacios Laura Digilio Harold M. McClure Zhiwei Chen Preston A. Marx Mark A. Goldsmith Robert M. Grant

The C-C chemokine receptor CCR5 in humans and rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) serves as the primary coreceptor for cellular entry by macrophagetropic strains of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) and all reported strains of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) [1-6]. Humans homozygous for a 32 bp deletion allele of CCR5, resulting in a null phenotype, are highly resistant to infection ...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید