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J Virol, January 1998, p. 396-404, Vol. 72, No. 1
0022-538X/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Genetic Subtype-Independent Inhibition of Human Immunodeficiency
Virus Type 1 Replication by CC and CXC Chemokines
Alexandra
Trkola,1
William A.
Paxton,1
Simon P.
Monard,1
James A.
Hoxie,2
Michael A.
Siani,3
Darren A.
Thompson,3
Lijun
Wu,4
Charles R.
Mackay,4
Richard
Horuk,5 and
John P.
Moore1,*
The Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center, The
Rockefeller University, New York, New York
100211;
Hematology-Oncology
Division, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
191042;
Gryphon Sciences Inc., South
San Francisco, California 940803;
Leukosite Inc., Cambridge, Massachusetts
021424; and
Department of
Immunology, Berlex Biosciences Inc., Richmond, California
948095
Received 13 June 1997/Accepted 29 September 1997
 |
ABSTRACT |
We have studied the breadth and potency of the inhibitory actions
of the CC chemokines macrophage inhibitory protein 1
(MIP-1
), MIP-1
, and RANTES against macrophage-tropic (M-tropic) primary isolates of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) and of the CXC
chemokine stromal cell-derived factor 1
against T-cell-tropic (T-tropic) isolates, using mitogen-stimulated primary CD4+
T cells as targets. There was considerable interisolate variation in
the sensitivity of HIV-1 to chemokine inhibition, which was especially
pronounced for the CC chemokines and M-tropic strains. However, this
variation was not obviously dependent on the genetic subtype (A through
F) of the virus isolates. Peripheral blood mononuclear cell
donor-dependent variation in chemokine inhibition potency was also
observed. Among the CC chemokines, the rank order for potency (from
most to least potent) was RANTES, MIP-1
, MIP-1
. Some M-tropic
isolates, unexpectedly, were much more sensitive to RANTES than to
MIP-1
, whereas other isolates showed sensitivities comparable to
those of these two chemokines. Down-regulation of the CCR5 and CXCR4
receptors occurred in cells treated with the cognate chemokines and
probably contributes to anti-HIV-1 activity. Thus, for CCR5, the rank
order for down-regulation was also RANTES, MIP-1
, MIP-1
.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
The CC chemokines macrophage
inhibitory protein-1
(MIP-1
), MIP-1
, and RANTES
inhibit the replication of certain human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) strains in CD4+ T cells (10, 11, 29, 43,
46). The HIV-1 isolates that are most sensitive to these CC
chemokines have the macrophage-tropic (M-tropic) phenotype and do not
form syncytia in MT-2 cells (29). These viruses are
therefore alternatively described as non-syncytium inducing (NSI).
M-tropic viruses enter CD4+ T cells by fusion at the plasma
membrane in a pathway that involves the CD4 molecule and the CC
chemokine receptor CCR5 (1, 9, 15, 17, 18), for which the
known ligands are MIP-1
, MIP-1
, and RANTES (45, 48).
These CC chemokines inhibit HIV-1 replication because they are
antagonists of HIV-1 entry (or env-mediated membrane fusion)
(1, 11, 15, 42). Competition for CCR5 binding between the
above-mentioned CC chemokines and the HIV-1 surface glycoprotein gp120
contributes to the inhibitory mechanism (27, 55, 59). Taken
together, these studies suggest that the development of inhibitors of
viral entry based on the CC chemokines might be a viable approach to
antiviral therapy against HIV-1. Indeed, derivatives of RANTES have
been shown to be more effective than RANTES itself, in vitro (4,
52).
The CXC chemokine stromal cell-derived factor (SDF)-1
has been shown
to inhibit the replication of T-cell-tropic (T-tropic) primary
isolates, or T-cell line-adapted strains, at the level of virus entry
(7, 41). Usually, these viruses form syncytia in MT-2 cells,
and they are often called syncytium-inducing (SI) strains. T-tropic
viruses can enter CD4+ T cells by using the CXC chemokine
receptor CXCR4 (22), of which the only known ligand is
SDF-1
(7, 41). However, many T-tropic primary isolates
can use both CCR5 and CXCR4 and so are considered dual tropic (12,
53). T-tropic viruses are usually relatively insensitive to the
above-mentioned CC chemokines (10, 29).
A decade ago, gp120 antagonists that inhibit the binding of HIV-1 to
its primary receptor, CD4, such as the soluble CD4 molecule, were found
to be highly effective at neutralizing the infectivity of the T-cell
line-adapted HIV-1 strains on which they were tested initially
(23, 39). However, it was later apparent that primary viruses were relatively resistant to the effects of soluble CD4 (8, 13, 38). With this lesson in mind, we set out to
investigate the broadness of the spectrum of HIV-1 strains on which the
CC and CXC chemokines were active. A second consideration was to determine whether there were genetic subtype-dependent patterns in the
sensitivity of HIV-1 strains to these chemokines, since therapeutic
agents should ideally not act on only a single genetic subtype.
Finally, we wished to know which of the CC chemokines was the most
active inhibitor of HIV-1 replication (hence, the best template for
therapeutic development) and whether we could discern subtleties in the
mechanisms of action of the individual CC chemokines.
We therefore assembled panels of M- and T-tropic HIV-1 strains from
genetic subtypes A through F and tested the effects of MIP-1
,
MIP-1
, RANTES, and SDF-1
on their replication in primary CD4+ T cells. Our conclusions are that there is no obvious
restriction on the actions of the CC chemokines or SDF-1
that
relates to the genetic subtypes, that RANTES was the most potent
inhibitor among the three CC chemokines we tested, and that RANTES is
better than MIP-1
and MIP-1
at down-regulating CCR5, which
probably contributes to its actions in vitro.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Viruses and chemokines.
Many virus isolates were obtained as
part of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease HIV-1
Antigenic Variation study or from similar programs organized by the
U.S. Department of Defense or the World Health Organization. Their
precise origins and their use in previous studies have been described
previously (36, 37, 56). Other isolates were obtained as
follows: isolate C 7/86 was from R. Connor (12), the
molecular clone of SF-2 was from C. Cheng-Mayer (34), the
biologically cloned isolate HC4 was from S. Forte and J. Sullivan
(24), the molecular clone DH123 was from R. Shibata and M. Martin (50), and the biologically cloned isolate 2076 clone
3 was from P. Clapham (53).
The recombinant human CC chemokines MIP-1
, MIP-1
, and RANTES were
purchased from R&D Systems Inc. (Minneapolis, Minn.). Synthetic
SDF-1
stocks were provided by Gryphon Sciences (M.A.S. and D.A.T.)
(51) and Berlex Biosciences (R.H.) (30). These proved to be of comparable purity and potency in blocking HIV-1 replication. Initial experiments were performed with both stocks, but
only data derived from using the Gryphon preparation are shown. The
CXCR4 down-regulation experiments (see Fig. 5b and 6b) were only
performed with Gryphon SDF-1
.
Determination of viral phenotype and coreceptor use.
The
phenotypes of many of the test viruses have been described previously
(36). Others were tested by the same method: their ability
to form syncytia in MT-2 cells. These cells were cultured in RPMI 1640 medium containing 10% fetal calf serum (FCS), glutamine, and
antibiotics and split twice a week. For infection assays, 105 cells were incubated with virus for 16 h and then
unbound virus was removed by two washes in culture medium. From days 3 through 7 postinfection, the cultures were examined microscopically for syncytium formation and the supernatant was analyzed for p24 antigen production by an in-house enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, as described previously (56).
U87MG-CD4 cell lines stably transfected with the CCR5 or CXCR4 genes
were a gift from Dan Littman (Skirball Institute for
Molecular
Medicine, New York, N.Y.) (
27). These cells were maintained
in Dulbecco's minimal essential medium containing 10% FCS, glutamine,
antibiotics, puromycin (1 µg/ml; Sigma Chemicals), and neomycin
(300 µg/ml; G418; Sigma) and split twice a week. For HIV-1 infection
experiments, 5 × 10
4 cells were incubated with virus
for 16 h, and then unbound virus
was removed by two washes in
culture medium. On days 3 and 6 postinfection,
the cultures were
examined microscopically for syncytium formation
and the supernatant
was analyzed for the presence of p24 antigen.
Chemokine inhibition of HIV-1 replication in primary
CD4+ T cells.
Peripheral blood mononuclear cells
(PBMC) were isolated from healthy blood donors by Ficoll-Hypaque
centrifugation and then stimulated for 2 to 3 days with
phytohemagglutinin (5 µg/ml) and interleukin-2 (IL-2) (100 U/ml) (a
gift from Hoffmann-LaRoche, Nutley, N.J.). CD4+ T cells
were purified from the activated PBMC by positive selection with
anti-CD4 immunomagnetic beads (DYNAL Inc.). The purified lymphocytes
were cultured for at least 3 days at 2 × 106/ml in
medium containing IL-2 (200 U/ml) before being used in the
125I-chemokine binding assay and for at least 1 day before
being used in infection assays. The cells were screened for
CCR5-defective alleles (32), and only cells from wild-type
donors were used (except when specified).
Inhibition of infection by chemokines was assessed as follows: 2 × 10
5 CD4
+ T cells in 100 µl of assay medium
(RPMI 1640, 10% FCS, 100 U/ml
IL-2, glutamine, and antibiotics) were
incubated with serial dilutions
of the chemokines (50 µl) for 1 h at 37°C. The virus inoculum
was adjusted to 400 to 1,000 50%
tissue culture infectious doses/ml,
and a 50-µl aliquot was added to
each culture. The calculated
inhibitory doses refer to the final
concentration of chemokine
in the culture on day 0. On days 4 and 6 postinfection, 50 µl
of supernatant was assayed for p24 antigen. As
the virus inoculum
was not washed out at any stage of the experiment,
we also measured
the residual input p24 concentration, which was
subtracted from
all test results. If virus production in the cultures
had not
reached its peak on day 6, the cultures were fed with 100 µl
of
medium without adding fresh chemokines and then reanalyzed for
p24
production on days 8, 10, and 12. Virus production in the
absence of
chemokine was designated as 100%, and the ratios of
p24 antigen
production in chemokine-containing cultures were calculated
relative to
this. The chemokine concentrations (in picograms per
milliliter)
causing 50% and 90% reduction in p24 antigen production
were
determined by linear regression analysis. If the appropriate
degree of
inhibition was not achieved at the highest or lowest
chemokine
concentration, a value with ">" or "<" was recorded.
Competition between gp120 and labeled chemokines.
These
experiments, using activated CD4+ T cells (2 × 106 in 200 µl), were performed as described previously
(55). 125I-RANTES and 125I-MIP-1
(specific activity, 2,200 Ci/mmol; Dupont-NEN) were used at 220 µCi/ml (0.1 nM). Monomeric gp120 from the M-tropic JR-FL strain was a
gift from Paul Maddon (Progenics Pharmaceuticals Inc.) (55).
Fluorescence-activated cell sorter analysis of CCR5 and CXCR4
expression levels.
Phytohemagglutinin- and IL-2-stimulated
CD4+ T cells were adjusted to 2 × 106/ml
in RPMI 1640 medium containing 10% FCS, 100 mM glutamine, antibiotics,
and IL-2 (200 U/ml). The cells were incubated for 3 days with or
without RANTES (1 µg/ml), MIP-1
, MIP-1
, or SDF-1
. On day 3, the cells were washed twice with Dulbecco's phosphate-buffered saline
(PBS) containing 1% bovine serum albumin and 0.05% sodium azide
(staining buffer) and then incubated for 20 min at room temperature
with the murine anti-CCR5 monoclonal antibody (MAb) 2D7 (10 µl of
hybridoma supernatant) (60, 61), the murine anti-CXCR4 MAb
12G5 (10 µg/ml in staining buffer; 10 µl) (19), or
murine immunoglobulin G1 (IgG1) and IgG2a isotype control MAbs (Becton
Dickinson). The cells were then washed three times with staining buffer
and resuspended in 25 µl of R-phycoerythrin-labeled goat-anti mouse
IgG (1:50 in staining buffer; DAKO). After 20 min at room temperature,
the cells were again washed three times with staining buffer,
resuspended in 50 µl of PBS, and fixed with 200 µl of PBS
containing 1% formaldehyde. Surface staining was analyzed with a
FACScalibur machine (Becton Dickinson). Mean and median fluorescence
intensity values were derived by using CellQuest software.
 |
RESULTS |
Characterization of test panels of HIV-1 isolates.
To assess
the anti-HIV-1 activity of the CC chemokine ligands of CCR5, it was
necessary to assemble a suitable panel of isolates, using viruses from
multiple genetic subtypes. We first chose those known from our previous
studies to have the NSI phenotype (36, 37, 56), in that they
did not form syncytia in MT-2 cells and so were unlikely to use the
CXCR4 coreceptor efficiently (12, 53). These isolates were
then tested for their ability to replicate in PBMC from individuals
with two wild-type or two defective (
-32) CCR5 alleles (depicted for
representative isolates in (Fig. 1). An
inability of HIV-1 to replicate efficiently in cells from
-32 CCR5
homozygotes indicates a dependency on CCR5 for their entry and
replication (18, 32, 43), although some caveats as to the
interpretation of these experiments are noted below (see Discussion section).

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FIG. 1.
Replication of representative M-tropic isolates in CD4+
T cells from donors homozygous for either wild-type or 32 CCR5
alleles. T cells from individuals homozygous for wild-type or -32
CCR5 alleles are indicated by closed and open symbols respectively.
Results for replication of the M-tropic isolates 92RW026 ( , ),
JRCSF ( , ), DJ259 ( , ), BZ162 ( , ), and CM235 ( ,
) and the T-tropic isolate NL4/3 (wild type [×]; -32 [*])
are shown.
|
|
The final test panel comprised two isolates from each of the genetic
subtypes A, D, E, and F, three isolates from subtype
C, and four
isolates from subtype B (Table
1). We
tested the
coreceptor usage of these isolates with U87MG-CD4 cells
stably
expressing either CCR5 or CXCR4 (
27). Each isolate
could use
only CCR5 under these circumstances (Table
1). This panel is
referred to, for convenience, as the M-tropic panel, although
we have
not tested the ability of all the isolates to replicate
in macrophages.
We also assembled a panel of CXCR4-using viruses for studies of the
antiviral effect of CXC chemokine SDF-1

. The viruses
chosen were all
of the SI phenotype, in that they formed syncytia
in MT-2 cells, and
all the SI strains that were tested replicated
in PBMC from individuals
homozygous for

-32 CCR5 alleles (Table
1). Each SI virus could
replicate in U87MG-CD4 cells stably expressing
CXCR4, but some also
replicated in CCR5-expressing U87MG-CD4 cells
(
27),
indicating that they were dual tropic (Table
1). This
panel is referred
to as the T-tropic panel. It comprised one isolate
from each of the
genetic subtypes A and E, two isolates from subtype
C, three isolates
from subtype D, and six isolates from subtype
B; we were unable to
identify a T-tropic primary virus from subtype
F (Table
1).
CC chemokine sensitivity of M-tropic isolates.
The M-tropic
isolates were tested for sensitivity to inhibition by each of the CC
chemokines MIP-1
, MIP-1
, and RANTES and by a 1:1:1 mixture of
the three, in mitogen-stimulated PBMC (Table 2; Fig. 2
and 3). Recorded in Table 2 are the
median 50% inhibitory doses (ID50s) and ID90s
for each CC chemokine and the equimolar mixture against each virus.
There was, clearly, considerable variation in the sensitivity of
different isolates to inhibition by CC chemokines; for example, the
virus most sensitive to RANTES was the Romanian subtype F isolate
R1 (ID90, 25 ng/ml); the one least sensitive was the North
American subtype B strain SF162 (ID90, 413 ng/ml [a
16.5-fold higher concentration]).

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FIG. 2.
Inhibition of M-tropic primary isolates by RANTES.
The genetic subtypes of the test isolates are recorded below the
isolate designations. The values shown are the medians + standard
deviations (error bars) of two to five determinations, each on
CD4+ T cells from different donors who were each wild type
for CCR5.
|
|

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FIG. 3.
Inhibition of M-tropic viruses by CC chemokines. The
individual median ID90s for each isolate and each CC
chemokine (Table 2) are presented, with the overall median values
indicated by bars. The data points marked with an asterisk and a dagger
represent, respectively, the isolates most (94KE103, subtype D) and
least (SF162, subtype B) sensitive to inhibition. MIX (1:1:1), 1:1:1
mixture of all three CC chemokines.
|
|
In principle, differences in virus replication rates could affect the
degree of inhibition by CC chemokines, since several
rounds of
replication take place in the PBMC cultures. To limit
this effect, we
took care to record HIV-1 antigen production when
virus replication
initially peaked, by sampling the cultures repeatedly
from 4 days after
infection onwards. Rapidly replicating viruses
were therefore harvested
earlier than slowly replicating ones,
which means that we measured the
inhibitory effects of the CC
chemokines after a similar number of
replication rounds irrespective
of the replication kinetics. Typical
p24 values at the time of
harvest for each isolate are recorded in
Table
1. We found no
correlation between the replication efficiency of
an isolate and
its sensitivity to CC chemokine inhibition (Tables
1 and
2).
There was also no obvious relationship between the genetic subtype of
the test isolate and CC chemokine sensitivity, a point
illustrated for
RANTES in Fig.
2. Although the number of test
isolates from each
individual subtype was small, some isolates
from each subtype were
RANTES sensitive (ID
90s, <100 ng/ml). Relatively
insensitive isolates (ID
90, >100 ng/ml) were identified
from subtypes
A, B, E, and F (Fig.
2; Table
2). The absence of
insensitive
subtype C and D strains from our panel is probably
attributable
to chance.
Figure
2 also illustrates another point: interdonor variability in the
CC chemokine sensitivity of HIV-1 replication in mitogen-stimulated
PBMC. Thus, the standard deviations of the median values can be
quite
large (also for MIP-1

and MIP-1

[not shown]). Our experience
is
that this is due to the use of cells from different donors
in repeat
experiments (within an individual experiment, variation
among
replicates is much less profound). Overall, HIV-1 replication
in some
donors' cells is quite sensitive to these three CC chemokines
and that
in others is quite insensitive, and the range of variation
in
ID
90s can exceed 1 log. This does not obscure interisolate
variation in sensitivity but obviously complicates analysis of
it.
Because of the anonymous nature of the blood donors whose
cells we
used, we were unable to explore any gender, racial, or
other personal
factors that could impact the variation observed.
When we compared the three CC chemokines for their individual potencies
as HIV-1 inhibitors, RANTES was clearly the most effective,
MIP-1

was the least active, and MIP-1

had intermediate potency.
This is best illustrated in Fig.
3, in which the individual median
ID
90s for each isolate and each CC chemokine (Table
2) are
presented
as a scatter plot, with the overall median values indicated
by
bars. The equimolar mixture of the three CC chemokines was actually
less effective than RANTES alone, presumably reflecting the
dilution
of the most active agent by less active ones. Thus, the three
CC chemokines are not synergistic (or even additive) in their
actions.
The data points in Fig.
3 that are marked with an asterisk
and a
dagger represent, respectively, the isolates most (94KE103,
subtype D)
and least (SF162, subtype B) sensitive to CC chemokines
(Table
2). Note
that both these isolates replicated with similar
efficiencies
(Table
1). Why there should be interisolate variation
to this extent
remains obscure, but 94KE103 was particularly unusual
in its
sensitivity to MIP-1

. Note also that RANTES and
MIP-1
had very similar effects on some isolates (e.g., 94KE103,
sensitive;
BZ162 and 92US657, insensitive) but widely differing effects
on
many others (e.g., R1 and DJ259, RANTES sensitive, MIP-1

insensitive)
(Table
2).
Interactions of chemokines with their receptors: gp120 competition
and receptor down-regulation.
The observation that MIP-1
is a
relatively weak inhibitor of HIV-1 replication is consistent with
reports that this ligand has the lowest ability among MIP-1
,
MIP-1
, and RANTES to activate signal transduction through CCR5
(3, 45). However, these three CC chemokines have similar
affinities for CCR5 in radioligand binding assays (3, 45,
48); indeed, RANTES actually had the lowest CCR5 affinity
among them, in one study (3). To explore why RANTES was,
despite this, often significantly the most potent at suppressing HIV-1
replication (Table 2, Fig. 3), we first tested whether there was a
difference in the ability of an M-tropic gp120 to compete with
radiolabeled RANTES and MIP-1
for binding to CCR5 on
mitogen-stimulated primary CD4+ T cells (55). We
were not able to test MIP-1
under the same conditions, as the level
of specific binding of 125I-MIP-1
to activated
CD4+ T cells was too low at the radioligand concentrations
used for the experiments with RANTES and MIP-1
(data not shown).
The rationale for the gp120 competition experiment was that ligand
affinities for CCR5 had been determined previously with
CCR5-transfected nonlymphoid cells and that the cellular context
might
conceivably impact on RANTES or MIP-1

binding. In fact,
we found
no significant difference in the interactions of RANTES
or MIP-1

with CCR5 on activated CD4
+ T cells, in that gp120 was able
to block the binding of each
of them equivalently (Fig.
4). This suggested that the greater
efficacy of RANTES as an inhibitor of HIV-1 replication could
be
attributable to another mechanism(s).

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FIG. 4.
Inhibition of RANTES and MIP-1 binding to CCR5 by
gp120 from the M-tropic strain, JRFL. JRFL gp120 at the concentrations
indicated was used to compete for the binding of
125I-labeled RANTES ( ) or MIP-1 ( ) to CCR5 on
activated CD4+ T cells. Each value recorded represents the
percentage inhibition of radioligand binding at each gp120
concentration. The experiments shown are representative for two to
three experiments performed with cells from different donors.
|
|
We took into consideration that, although RANTES can interact with
receptors other than CCR5 (
44,
57), the viruses in
our
M-tropic test panel replicated poorly in CD4
+ T cells from
individuals lacking a functional CCR5 protein (Table
1). This focused
our attention on CCR5. Because ligand binding
can cause receptor
down-regulation as part of a desensitization
mechanism (
3,
21,
25,
54), we investigated whether this
occurred when chemokines
interacted with CCR5 and CXCR4 on activated
CD4
+ T cells.
We therefore used the CCR5-specific MAb 2D7 (
60,
61)
and the
CXCR4-specific MAb 12G5 (
19) to measure the levels of
coreceptor expression on the surface of these cells, before and
after exposure to chemokines.
Both MAbs have been shown to bind to epitopes which overlap with the
chemokine binding sites on these receptors (
19,
60,
61). It
was therefore necessary to demonstrate that residual
chemokines did not
interfere with the binding of 2D7 and 12G5
to CCR5 and CXCR4 under the
assay conditions we used. Thus, we
compared 2D7 binding to activated
CD4
+ T cells in the presence of CC chemokines (1 µg/ml)
with that
in the absence of CC chemokines. When RANTES (1 µg/ml)
was added
simultaneously with 2D7, only a 7.2% reduction in 2D7
binding
was observed (Fig.
5a). When
cells were pretreated for 10 min
with RANTES, followed by two
washes (to mimic more closely our
staining protocol), and then stained
with 2D7, there was only
a 0.9% decrease in 2D7 binding. Analogous
experiments were performed
with 12G5 and SDF-1

(Fig.
5b).
Simultaneous addition of the chemokine
and the MAb resulted in a 16.8%
decrease in 12G5 binding, but
when the cells were preincubated with
SDF-1

and then washed,
there was only a 7.4% reduction in 12G5
binding. Residual chemokines
do not, therefore, significantly interfere
with the use of the
2D7 and 12G5 MAbs to monitor CCR5 and CXCR4
expression.

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FIG. 5.
Determination of surface expression of CCR5 and CXCR4 on
chemokine-treated cells. Chemokine receptor expression on
CD4+ T cells was determined by MAb staining on untreated
cells, on cells pretreated for 10 min with 1 µg of chemokine per ml
and then washed, and in the continuous presence of 1 µg of chemokine
per ml, as indicated. Shown are mean fluorescence intensities obtained
for CCR5 staining with MAb 2D7 in the presence and absence of
RANTES (a) and for CXCR4 with MAb 12G5 in the presence and absence
of SDF-1 (b). Error bars, standard error of the mean.
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|
We then treated activated CD4
+ T cells for 2 h and 3 days with MIP-1

, MIP-1

, RANTES, or the CXC chemokine
SDF-1

. We used
a chemokine concentration of 1 µg/ml,
which is saturating for
each CC chemokine in terms of CCR5
binding (
3,
45,
48)
and which is comparable with the highest
concentration used in
the infection-inhibition studies. All three CC
chemokines reduced
the surface expression of CCR5 significantly within
2 h and to
a greater extent after 3 days (Fig.
6a). In a separate experiment,
significant down-regulation of CCR5 was also observed after a
1-h
incubation (data not shown). Among the three CC chemokines,
RANTES
was the most potent at down-regulating CCR5, whereas SDF-1
had no
effect (Fig.
6a and data not shown). Similar results were
obtained with
a mouse pre-B lymphoma cell line (L1.2) expressing
human CCR5
(
60).

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FIG. 6.
Surface expression of CCR5 and CXCR4 after exposure to
CC and CXC chemokines. CD4+ T cells were treated for 2 h (gray bars) and 3 days (black bars) with CC or CXC chemokines (1 µg/ml) and the stained for surface expression of CCR5 (a) and CXCR4
(b) with MAbs 2D7 and 12G5, respectively. The median fluorescence
intensities of the CCR5- and CXCR4-positive populations are shown as
percentages of the levels for untreated control cells. The data shown
were derived from one of two independent experiments on cells from two
different donors.
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|
On the CD4
+ T cells, the rank order for the extent of CCR5
down-regulation (from greatest to least) was reproducibly RANTES,
MIP-1

, MIP-1

, which is the same as the rank order for their
inhibition of HIV-1 replication (cf. Fig.
3 and
5a) and also for
their activation of signal transduction (
3,
45). However,
in
absolute terms, RANTES was only a little more potent than MIP-1
at down-regulating CCR5 (Fig.
5a). Whether the additional
down-regulation
of CCR5 by RANTES is sufficient to
account for the greater HIV-1-inhibitory
effect of this ligand in the
CD4
+ T-cell cultures remains to be resolved. Although the
cells were
preincubated with CC chemokines for only 1 h before
HIV-1 addition
and there is less CCR5 down-regulation at this time
(Fig.
6a and
data not shown), the chemokines were not subsequently
removed
from the cultures. A more sustained down-regulation of CCR5
might
significantly impact the efficiency of subsequent rounds of HIV-1
replication in these cultures.
Effect of CXC chemokine SDF-1
on replication of T-tropic
strains.
The CXC chemokine SDF-1
is a ligand for CXCR4 and
inhibits the infection of CD4+ T cells by T-tropic HIV-1
strains (7, 41). We tested the breadth of SDF-1
activity
by using the T-tropic HIV-1 panel described in Table 1. As found with
the CC chemokines, there could be significant variation in the potency
with which SDF-1
inhibited the replication of different HIV-1
isolates in activated primary CD4+ T cells with wild-type
CCR5 alleles (Table 3). Thus, the
ID90 of SDF-1
for the most-sensitive strain (ZAM20,
subtype C) was 0.2 µg/ml, whereas the least-sensitive strain (DH123,
subtype B) was not inhibited by 90% at 5 µg/ml, a 20-fold higher
SDF-1
concentration. However, most of the test isolates had
ID90s between 2.7 and 4.9 µg/ml, a relatively narrow
range (Table 3). Analogous to what was observed with the M-tropic
isolates, replication efficiency was not correlated with sensitivity to
SDF-1
inhibition (Tables 1 and 2). Although some of the test
isolates were dual tropic, in that they were able to use both CCR5 and
CXCR4 to enter transfected U87MG-CD4 cells, they were not, on average,
differentially sensitive to SDF-1
compared to the isolates that
could use only CXCR4 (Table 3).
The limited number of T-tropic isolates from outside subype B limits
any conclusion that can be drawn about the relationship
between
SDF-1

sensitivity and the genetic subtypes, but no pattern
was
obvious from inspection of the available data (Table
3).
The subtype B
strains were also tested for SDF-1

sensitivity
with CD4
+
T cells from individuals homozygous for

-32 CCR5 alleles, to
assess
whether the absence of CCR5 affected entry via CXCR4. Any
differences
observed with these cells compared to CCR5 wild-type
cells were minor
(Table
3). SDF-1

was also tested for its effects
on the
replication of M-tropic isolates in CD4
+ T cells.
Under certain circumstances, it was observed to cause
enhancement of
HIV-1 replication. The results of these studies
will be described
elsewhere.
We also assessed whether CXCR4 was down-regulated after SDF-1

binding, by staining with the CXCR4-specific MAb 12G5 (
19).
SDF-1

, but none of the three CC chemokines, significantly reduced
surface expression of CXCR4 after 3 days of culture (Fig.
6b).
In
contrast to what was observed with the CC chemokines and CCR5,
down-regulation of CXCR4 expression was greater after 2 h of
incubation
with SDF-1

than it was after 3 days (Fig.
6b). This is
consistent
with observations that after 2 h of SDF-1

treatment
of CXCR4-expressing
cell lines, up to 90% of surface CXCR4 is
down-regulated (
28).
Thus, CXCR4 down-regulation could
contribute to the mechanism
by which SDF-1

inhibits HIV-1 entry and
replication.
 |
DISCUSSION |
The CC chemokines quite broadly inhibit primary, M-tropic
HIV-1 viruses; most isolates were sensitive to, at least,
RANTES. However, there was a wide spectrum of
sensitivity, even to RANTES, and some isolates were only inhibited
at relatively high chemokine concentrations. Certain isolates were far
more sensitive to RANTES than to MIP-1
and MIP-1
. It would be
prudent to include both sensitive and relatively insensitive isolates,
such as those identified here, when testing the activity of CC
chemokine-based inhibitors targeted at CCR5. Similarly, we also
observed variation in the sensitivity of T-tropic isolates to SDF-1
;
one isolate (ZAM20) was unusually sensitive.
It is not clear why HIV-1 isolates are differentially sensitive to CC
or CXC chemokines. Replication efficiency was clearly not correlated
with the sensitivity of chemokine inhibition. Most of the viruses in
the M-tropic panel were uncloned isolates (as opposed to molecular
clones), because few clones are available. It is appropriate to use
uncloned isolates in vitro, because antiviral agents have to be
effective in the face of quasispecies variation in vivo to be of any
value. However, the use of uncloned isolates does impact analyses of
the mechanisms of chemokine insensitivity. We were careful to check
that the M-tropic isolates did not replicate efficiently in
CD4+ T cells from individuals homozygous for
-32-CCR5
alleles (18, 32, 43). Thus, the presence of CCR5 is
necessary for entry of these viruses into human CD4+ T
cells. The simplest explanation is that CCR5 is the only coreceptor used efficiently for entry into these cells, but an alternative possibility is discussed below. None of the M-tropic isolates induced
syncytia in MT-2 cells, indicating they have the NSI phenotype and do
not use CXCR4 efficiently. Nonetheless, some CC chemokine-insensitive entry, via CXCR4 perhaps, of some quasispecies of certain M-tropic isolates could occur, reducing the inhibitory effect of CC chemokines.
Similar arguments could be made to explain the variable sensitivity of
T-tropic isolates to SDF-1
. However, whether a T-tropic isolate
could use CCR5 as well as CXCR4 in transfected cells (i.e., whether it
was capable of dual tropism) did not have a major effect on SDF-1
inhibition among the limited number of isolates we tested. Furthermore,
although there were outliers, most T-tropic isolates were inhibited by
SDF-1
in a concentration range that was relatively narrow compared
to that found for (e.g.) RANTES.
Notwithstanding the mechanisms that could contribute to the efficiency
of inhibition, most HIV-1 isolates were sensitive to some degree to
either CC or CXC chemokines. We could find no evidence for a genetic
subtype-dependent component to the inhibitory mechanism(s). Thus,
although the number of isolates we could test from each individual
subtype was limited (especially for T-tropic viruses), no subtype was
either chemokine sensitive or insensitive. For M-tropic isolates, this
is consistent with observations that all subtypes require CCR5 for
entry into CD4+ T cells (62) and can use the
cloned CCR5 coreceptor (9, 62). Thus, genetic variation at
the subtype level is unlikely to be a major limitation to the
development of antiviral therapies aimed at CCR5 and CXCR4. However,
genetic variation on a less-profound scale cannot be ignored; the
possible presence of CC chemokine-insensitive viruses in uncloned
M-tropic isolates suggests that escape mutants may develop.
Among the three CC chemokines we tested, RANTES clearly had the
greatest breadth and potency of action, whereas MIP-1
was only
weakly active (Fig. 3). Assuming that this is not an artifact of the
use of recombinant proteins in vitro (35, 58), drug development based on the CC-chemokines should focus on the RANTES structure and not on MIP-1
. This conclusion was, perhaps,
anticipated by the creators of the Met-RANTES and AOP-RANTES
derivatives (4, 52). But why is RANTES the most potent
CC chemokine and MIP-1
the least potent? Since gp120 and CC
chemokines mutually compete for binding to CCR5 (27, 55,
59), variations in ligand affinities for CCR5 could be relevant.
However, MIP-1
, MIP-1
, and RANTES have comparable affinities
for CCR5 (3, 45, 48). In one study, MIP-1
was actually
found to have a 10-fold-higher affinity than RANTES for CCR5
(3), yet RANTES is much more potent at inhibiting HIV-1
replication. Furthermore, an M-tropic gp120 competed equally well for
the binding of MIP-1
and RANTES to CCR5 (Fig. 4), implying that
a factor other than CCR5 affinity may contribute to the more potent
antiviral activity of RANTES. Together, these observations suggest
that competitive inhibition of the gp120-CCR5 interaction,
although it occurs (27, 55, 59), is not the sole mechanism
by which CC chemokines inhibit HIV-1 replication.
The nature of the gp120-CCR5 interaction could, however, contribute to
interisolate variation in CC chemokine sensitivity. If CC chemokines
inhibit HIV-1 binding to CCR5 by a truly competitive mechanism, then
the affinity of the gp120 ligand will be an important variable: a
low-affinity gp120-CCR5 interaction would be more efficiently blocked
by a CC-chemokine than a high-affinity one. Because we used uncloned
isolates, we cannot readily test this. A related, but subtly distinct,
scenario is that different gp120s interact with nonidentical sites on
CCR5, a concept for which there is some support (5, 6, 16, 33,
47). The degree of overlap between the different gp120 binding
sites and the CC chemokine site(s) might, therefore, differ, which
could impact the efficiency of what would be a noncompetitive mechanism
of inhibition (parallel arguments can be made for CXCR4 and SDF-1
). Highly detailed competitive binding studies with pure reagents (i.e.,
clonal gp120s and coreceptor-transfected cells) could resolve these
issues, but they are beyond the scope of the present work.
The rank order we observed among the CC chemokines for inhibition of
HIV-1 replication might be explained by sustained CCR5 desensitization
after ligand binding. Indeed, the rank order for CCR5 down-regulation
on CD4+ T cells by the three CC chemokines after 3 days in
culture (Fig. 6a) was reproducibly the same as the rank order for their
median antiviral activity (Fig. 3). Other studies have found the same rank order for the abilities of RANTES, MIP-1
, and MIP-1
to activate signal transduction through CCR5 (3, 45). In
particular, the ineffectiveness of MIP-1
against HIV-1 may be
related to its limited ability to cause signal transduction (3,
45); indeed, MIP-1
has been described as being only a partial
agonist of CCR5 (3). Signaling via CCR5 is clearly not
necessary for HIV-1 entry (3, 21, 25) but might contribute
to the mechanism by which CC chemokines inhibit HIV-1 replication.
There is now good evidence that CXCR4 down-regulation contributes to
the antiviral action of SDF-1
(2). Down-regulation of
CCR5 could help reduce HIV-1 spread through the PBMC cultures, which
were not maintained under single-cycle replication conditions. However,
MIP-1
is also the weakest among the three CC chemokines at blocking
HIV-1 entry in a single-cycle assay (18), suggesting that
effects on viral spread are not the entire story.
The extra extent of CCR5 down-regulation induced by RANTES compared
to MIP-1
and MIP-1
may not be sufficient to account for the far
greater antiviral effect shown by RANTES against some viruses
(e.g., isolates R1 and DJ259 were RANTES sensitive, but both were
MIP-1
and MIP-1
insensitive [Table 2]). Furthermore, MIP-1
and RANTES are almost indistinguishable in their activation of
signal transduction through CCR5 (3, 45, 48). Hence, there
may be additional complexities to the antiviral action of RANTES,
at least for some isolates.
The interactions of RANTES with receptors other than CCR5 might
impact the efficiency with which HIV-1 replication (as opposed to
entry) is inhibited. CD4+ T cells express another
coreceptor(s) that can be used by some M-tropic viruses (14, 20,
31). In principle, this could help account for both the relative
insensitivity of some isolates to MIP-1
, MIP-1
, and RANTES
(these isolates would use an additional coreceptor unable to bind some
or all of these ligands) and the superiority of RANTES against a
subset of isolates (the additional coreceptor might bind only
RANTES). But how could this scenario be squared with the
observations that M-tropic isolates replicate poorly in
CD4+ T cells from individuals homozygous for
-32 CCR5
alleles? A possible explanation is that CD4+ T cells from
these individuals oversecrete CC chemokines, especially RANTES
(18, 43). In principle, this could cause autocrine inhibition of HIV-1 entry via another coreceptor normally used as well
as CCR5 (or perhaps even in concert with it, as has been proposed for
CCR3 and CCR5 on brain monocytes [26]). If the hypothetical coreceptor were a RANTES, but not MIP-1
,
receptor, this could account for the more potent antiviral activity of
RANTES against some isolates (both putative coreceptors, not just
CCR5, would be blocked). However, none of the recently identified new coreceptors is a RANTES receptor (14, 20, 31).
It is a curious complexity that the apparent insensitivity to CC
chemokines of HIV-1 replication in monocytes/macrophages observed by
most (but not all [1]) groups (18, 40, 49, 52) is overcome by the use of a RANTES derivative that is
unable to activate signal transduction (52). In these cells,
signalling via CCR5 may activate HIV-1 replication at a postentry
stage, whereas in T cells, signaling that leads to CCR5 down-regulation may contribute to the inhibition of HIV-1 replication. In PBMC cultures, where both T cells and monocytes/macrophages are present, multiple, possibly opposing effects may occur. The point at which activating and inhibitory effects of the chemokines on HIV-1
replication balance out may be both donor and isolate dependent, as we
have observed. Much remains to be discovered about precisely how the CC
chemokines affect HIV-1 replication in CD4+ T cells and
macrophages. Such knowledge could contribute to the rational
development of antiviral drugs aimed at blocking virus entry, via CCR5
and/or other coreceptors, and should be sought.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Audrey Pomales, Shab Alipanah, Tom Ketas, Fred Endorf,
and Stan Kang for technical assistance during the course of this study.
We are very grateful to Paul Maddon for provision of recombinant gp120
(JRFL) and to Dan Littman for his gift of U87MG-CD4 cells stably
expressing the CCR5 or CXCR4 coreceptors. We thank R. Connor, C. Cheng-Mayer, S. Forte, J. Sullivan, R. Shibata, M. Martin, and P. Clapham for HIV-1 isolates and clones.
This study was supported by NIH grant AI41420, by the Pediatric AIDS
Foundation, and by NIAID contract NO1 AI35168 (Antigenic variation of
HIV-1 and related lentiviruses). A.T. was a Fellow of the Fonds
zur Förderung der wissenschaftlichen Forschung (award J01165-MED) and the Austrian Program for Advanced Research and Technology; J.P.M. is an Elizabeth Glaser Scientist of the Pediatric AIDS Foundation.
 |
ADDENDUM IN PROOF |
All the studies we report in this paper were performed using a
single stock of RANTES (R&D Systems; Lot D012) that was available between 1996 and 1997. Preliminary studies on new preparations of
RANTES from the same manufacturer, and also on stocks from Gryphon,
indicate that there can be stock-dependent variations in the efficiency
with which RANTES inhibits HIV-1 replication. Although these variations
are relatively minor in magnitude, they do need to be taken into
account when comparing data sets in this paper with those obtained
using other preparations of RANTES.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: The Aaron
Diamond AIDS Research Center, 455 First Ave., New York, NY 10021. Phone: (212) 725-0018. Fax: (212) 725-1126. E-mail:
jmoore{at}adarc.org.
 |
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0022-538X/98/$04.00+0
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