نتایج جستجو برای: ccr5

تعداد نتایج: 4196  

2014
Weiming Wang Chaobaihui Ye Jingjing Liu Di Zhang Jason T. Kimata Paul Zhou

CCR5, a coreceptor for HIV-1 entry, is a major target for drug and genetic intervention against HIV-1. Genetic intervention strategies have knocked down CCR5 expression levels by shRNA or disrupted the CCR5 gene using zinc finger nucleases (ZFN) or Transcription activator-like effector nuclease (TALEN). In the present study, we silenced CCR5 via CRISPR associated protein 9 (Cas9) and single gui...

2015
Emily J. Platt James P. Durnin David Kabat

The CCR5 coreceptor amino terminus and extracellular (ECL) loops 1 and 2 have been implicated in HIV-1 infections, with species differences in these regions inhibiting zoonoses. Interactions of gp120 with CD4 and CCR5 reduce constraints on metastable envelope subunit gp41, enabling gp41 conformational changes needed for infection. We previously selected HIV-1JRCSF variants that efficiently use ...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2010
John C Tilton Craig B Wilen Chukwuka A Didigu Rohini Sinha Jessamina E Harrison Caroline Agrawal-Gamse Elizabeth A Henning Frederick D Bushman Jeffrey N Martin Steven G Deeks Robert W Doms

CCR5 antagonists inhibit HIV entry by binding to a coreceptor and inducing changes in the extracellular loops (ECLs) of CCR5. In this study, we analyzed viruses from 11 treatment-experienced patients who experienced virologic failure on treatment regimens containing the CCR5 antagonist maraviroc (MVC). Viruses from one patient developed high-level resistance to MVC during the course of treatmen...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2004
Erika Billick Christoph Seibert Pavel Pugach Tom Ketas Alexandra Trkola Michael J Endres Nicholas J Murgolo Elizabeth Coates Gregory R Reyes Bahige M Baroudy Thomas P Sakmar John P Moore Shawn E Kuhmann

AD101 and SCH-C are two chemically related small molecules that inhibit the entry of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) via human CCR5. AD101 also inhibits HIV-1 entry via rhesus macaque CCR5, but SCH-C does not. Among the eight residues that differ between the human and macaque versions of the coreceptor, only one, methionine-198, accounts for the insensitivity of macaque CCR5 to inhi...

Journal: :The Journal of Experimental Medicine 1997
Lijun Wu William A. Paxton Nasim Kassam Nancy Ruffing James B. Rottman Nancy Sullivan Hyeryun Choe Joseph Sodroski Walter Newman Richard A. Koup Charles R. Mackay

Chemokine receptors serve as coreceptors for HIV entry into CD4+ cells. Their expression is thought to determine the tropism of viral strains for different cell types, and also to influence susceptibility to infection and rates of disease progression. Of the chemokine receptors, CCR5 is the most important for viral transmission, since CCR5 is the principal receptor for primary, macrophage-tropi...

Journal: :Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy 2006
Jose D Murga Michael Franti Daniel C Pevear Paul J Maddon William C Olson

The chemokine receptor CCR5 provides a portal of entry for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) into susceptible CD4(+) cells. Both monoclonal antibody (MAb) and small-molecule CCR5 inhibitors have entered human clinical testing, but little is known regarding their potential interactions. We evaluated the interactions between CCR5 MAbs, small-molecule CCR5 antagonists, and inhibitors of ...

Journal: :Journal of immunology 1999
A M de Roda Husman H Blaak M Brouwer H Schuitemaker

CCR5 cell-surface expression was studied in relation to CCR5 genotype and clinical course of HIV-1 infection. HIV-1 infected CCR5+/+ individuals had higher percentages of CCR5-expressing CD4+ T cells as compared with HIV-1-infected CCR532/+ individuals. For both genotypic groups, the percentages of CCR5-expressing cells were higher than for the uninfected counterparts (CCR5+/+, HIV+ 28% and HIV...

Journal: :Cell 1996
Rong Liu William A Paxton Sunny Choe Daniel Ceradini Scott R Martin Richard Horuk Marcy E MacDonald Heidi Stuhlmann Richard A Koup Nathaniel R Landau

Rare individuals have been multiply exposed to HIV-1 but remain uninfected. The CD4+ T-cells of two of these individuals, designated EU2 and EU3, are highly resistant in vitro to the entry of primary macrophagetropic virus but are readily infectable with transformed T-cell line adapted viruses. We report here on the genetic basis of this resistance. We found that EU2 and EU3 have a homozygous d...

2016
Sun Mi Gu Mi Hee Park Hyung Mun Yun Sang Bae Han Ki Wan Oh Dong Ju Son Jae Suk Yun Jin Tae Hong

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an inflammatory disease in which myelin in the spinal cord is damaged. C-C chemokine receptor type 5 (CCR5) is implicated in immune cell migration and cytokine release in central nervous system (CNS). We investigated whether CCR5 plays a role in MS progression using a murine model, experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), in CCR5 deficient (CCR5-/-) mice. CCR5...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2013
Philippe Colin Yann Bénureau Isabelle Staropoli Yongjin Wang Nuria Gonzalez Jose Alcami Oliver Hartley Anne Brelot Fernando Arenzana-Seisdedos Bernard Lagane

CC chemokine receptor 5 (CCR5) is a receptor for chemokines and the coreceptor for R5 HIV-1 entry into CD4(+) T lymphocytes. Chemokines exert anti-HIV-1 activity in vitro, both by displacing the viral envelope glycoprotein gp120 from binding to CCR5 and by promoting CCR5 endocytosis, suggesting that they play a protective role in HIV infection. However, we showed here that different CCR5 confor...

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