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. 1996 Nov 1;87(3):437-46.
doi: 10.1016/s0092-8674(00)81364-1.

Regions in beta-chemokine receptors CCR5 and CCR2b that determine HIV-1 cofactor specificity

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Free article

Regions in beta-chemokine receptors CCR5 and CCR2b that determine HIV-1 cofactor specificity

J Rucker et al. Cell. .
Free article

Abstract

Macrophage-tropic (M-tropic) HIV-1 strains use the beta-chemokine receptor CCR5, but not CCR2b, as a cofactor for membrane fusion and infection, while the dual-tropic strain 89.6 uses both. CCR5/2b chimeras and mutants were used to map regions of CCR5 important for cofactor function and specificity. M-tropic strains required either the amino-terminal domain or the first extracellular loop of CCR5. A CCR2b chimera containing the first 20 N-terminal residues of CCR5 supported M-tropic envelope protein fusion. Amino-terminal truncations of CCR5/CCR2b chimeras indicated that residues 2-5 are important for M-tropic viruses, while 89.6 is dependent on residues 6-9. The identification of multiple functionally important regions in CCR5, coupled with differences in how CCR5 is used by M- and dual-tropic viruses, suggests that interactions between HIV-1 and entry cofactors are conformationally complex.

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