Role for Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Membrane Cholesterol in Viral Internalization
Open Access
- 15 October 2002
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Virology
- Vol. 76 (20) , 10356-10364
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.76.20.10356-10364.2002
Abstract
The membrane of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) virions contains high levels of cholesterol and sphingomyelin, an enrichment that is explained by the preferential budding of the virus through raft microdomains of the plasma membrane. Upon depletion of cholesterol from HIV-1 virions with methyl-β-cyclodextrin, infectivity was almost completely abolished. In contrast, this treatment had only a mild effect on the infectiousness of particles pseudotyped with the G envelope of vesicular stomatitis virus. The cholesterol-chelating compound nystatin had a similar effect. Cholesterol-depleted HIV-1 virions exhibited wild-type patterns of viral proteins and contained normal levels of cyclophilin A and glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored proteins. Nevertheless, and although they could still bind target cells, these virions were markedly defective for internalization. These results indicate that the cholesterol present in the HIV-1 membrane plays a prominent role in the fusion process that is key to viral entry and suggest that drugs capable of disturbing the lipid composition of virions could serve as a basis for the development of microbicides.Keywords
This publication has 88 references indexed in Scilit:
- Lipid Raft MicrodomainsThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2002
- Cytoplasmic Recruitment of INI1 and PML on Incoming HIV Preintegration ComplexesMolecular Cell, 2001
- Evidence That the Transition of HIV-1 Gp41 into a Six-Helix Bundle, Not the Bundle Configuration, Induces Membrane FusionThe Journal of cell biology, 2000
- In Vivo Gene Delivery and Stable Transduction of Nondividing Cells by a Lentiviral VectorScience, 1996
- HIV nuclear import is governed by the phosphotyrosine-mediated binding of matrix to the core domain of integraseCell, 1995
- Peptides corresponding to a predictive alpha-helical domain of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 gp41 are potent inhibitors of virus infection.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1994
- HIV-1 Reverse Transcription A Termination Step at the Center of the GenomeJournal of Molecular Biology, 1994
- Cholesterol is required in the exit pathway of Semliki Forest virus.The Journal of cell biology, 1993
- Cholesterol controls the clustering of the glycophospholipid-anchored membrane receptor for 5-methyltetrahydrofolate.The Journal of cell biology, 1990
- Drug solubilizers to aid pharmacologists: Amorphous cyclodextrin derivativesLife Sciences, 1988