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Selective inhibition of HIV replication in primary macrophages but not T lymphocytes by macrophage-derived chemokine
- Publication Year :
- 2000
-
Abstract
- Macrophage-derived chemokine (MDC) has been reported to inhibit different HIV-1 strains in activated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (T cell blasts), although other investigators have not confirmed these findings. Here we demonstrate that MDC inhibits the replication of CCR5-dependent (R5) HIV-1BaLin monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM), but not in T cell blasts, although with variable potency depending on donor variability. Analysis of HIV-1BaLproviral DNA synthesis in MDM indicated that the suppressive effect of MDC did not involve inhibition of early events such as entry or reverse transcription. Finally, an inverse correlation was observed between the levels of endogenous MDC secreted by uninfected MDM of different donors and the efficiency of different HIV strains, including two primary isolates with different coreceptor usage, to replicate in these cells. Thus, MDC represents an example of a chemokine inhibiting HIV replication in macrophages acting at one or more postentry levels in the virus life cycle.
- Subjects :
- Chemokine
Multidisciplinary
biology
Base Sequence
Chemokine receptor CCR5
T cell
Macrophages
T-Lymphocytes
Biological Sciences
Virus Replication
Peripheral blood mononuclear cell
Virology
Antiviral Agents
CCL5
Reverse transcriptase
medicine.anatomical_structure
Viral replication
biology.protein
medicine
HIV-1
CCL17
Humans
Chemokines
Cells, Cultured
DNA Primers
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....81f7b104979a156b0d66922ed5af004f