HIV-1 gp41 and type I interferon: sequence homology and biological as well as clinical implications
- PMID: 10945227
- DOI: 10.1385/ir:22:1:61
HIV-1 gp41 and type I interferon: sequence homology and biological as well as clinical implications
Abstract
HIV-1 gp41-like human type I interferon (IFN) could inhibit lymphocyte proliferation and up-modulate MHC class I and II and ICAM-1 molecule expression. Sequence comparison indicates that a similar epitope RILAV-YLKD exists between N-domain of gp41 and two regions in IFN-alpha(aa29-35 and 113-129), IFN-beta (aa31-37 and 125-138) and IFN-omega (aa29-35 and 123-136), which was shown to form IFN-alpha/beta-receptor binding site. Weak sequence similarity was also found to exist in both regions on gp41 and type I IFN of murine and bovine. Experimental studies indicated that a common immunological epitope exists between gp41 and IFN-alpha and -beta. Antibodies against human IFN-alpha and -beta recognized the common immunological epitope and inhibited gp41-binding to the potential cellular receptor protein p45. Moreover, the polyclonal antibody to IFN-beta completely inhibited gp41-binding to human T, B cells and monocytic cells, while IFN-alpha could only inhibit this binding incompletely. It was interestingly observed that human IFN-beta after preincubating with cells could incompletely inhibit the binding of gp41 to human B cells and monocytic cells, and very weakly inhibit the binding to human T cells, indicating that the receptor for IFN-beta-binding may be involved in gp41 binding. This potential relationship may be based on the amino acid sequence homology in the receptor binding region between gp41 and IFN-beta. It was observed that the increased levels of antibodies against human IFN-alpha and -beta exist in HIV-1-infected individuals and are associated with the common epitope on gp41. Besides, several studies provided experimental evidence that the common immunological epitope could induce protective activity against HIV-1. The IFN-alpha-based vaccine has showed a significant reduction of disease progression in IFN-alpha-vaccine-treated HIV-infected patients. Recent experimental evidence indicates that gp41 and IFN-beta were involved in downregulation of CCR5 expression and induction of cell activation or signal transduction. Whether it may be performed by a similar mechanism is still to be investigated.
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