Human erythrocytes bearing electroinserted CD4 neutralize infection in vitro by primary isolates of human immunodeficiency virus type 1.

Autor: Tosi PF; Center for Blood Research Laboratory and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA., Schwartz D, Sharma U, Mouneimne Y, Hannig J, Li G, McKinley G, Grieco M, Flexner CW, Lazarte J, Norse D, Nicolau C, Volsky DJ
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Blood [Blood] 1996 Jun 01; Vol. 87 (11), pp. 4839-44.
Abstrakt: Human erythrocytes bearing electroinserted full-length CD4 (RBC-CD4) can bind and fuse with a laboratory strain of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) or with T cells infected by HIV-1. Here we show that RBC-CD4 neutralize primary HIV-1 strains in an assay of cocultivation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from HIV-1-infected persons with uninfected PBMC. RBC-CD4 inhibited viral p24 core antigen accumulation in these cocultures up to 10,000-fold compared with RBC alone. Viral p24 accumulation was inhibited equally well when measured in culture supernatants or in call extracts. The inhibition was dose-dependent and long-lived. Two types of recombinant CD4 tested in parallel were largely ineffective. The neutralization of primary HIV-1 by RBC-CD4 in vitro was demonstrated in PBMC cultures from 21 of a total of 23 patients tested at two independent sites. RBC-CD4 may offer a route to blocking HIV-1 infection in vivo.
Databáze: MEDLINE