J Clin Invest. 1990 Oct;86(4):1142-50. Unique Identifier : AIDSLINE
The envelope (membrane) glycoprotein of HIV is essential for virus
attachment and entry into host cells. Additionally, when expressed on
the plasma membrane of infected cells, the envelope protein is
responsible for mediating cell-cell fusion which leads to the formation
of multinucleated giant cells, one of the major cytopathic effects of
HIV infections. The envelope glycoproteins of HIV contain regions that
can fold into amphipathic alpha-helixes, and these regions have been
suggested to play a role in subunit associations and in virus-induced
cell fusion and cytopathic effects of HIV. We therefore tested the
possibility that amphipathic helix-containing peptides and proteins may
interfere with the HIV amphipathic peptides and inhibit those steps of
HIV infection involving membrane fusion. Apolipoprotein A-I, the major
protein component of high density lipoprotein, and its amphipathic
peptide analogue were found to inhibit cell fusion, both in
HIV-1-infected T cells and in recombinant vaccinia-virus-infected CD4+
HeLa cells expressing HIV envelope protein on their surfaces. The
amphipathic peptides inhibited the infectivity of HIV-1. The inhibitory
effects were manifest when the virus, but not cells, was pretreated with
the peptides. Also, a reduction in HIV-induced cell killing was observed
when virus-infected cell cultures were maintained in presence of
amphipathic peptides. These results have potential implications for HIV
biology and therapy.
Amino Acid Sequence Apolipoproteins A/*PHARMACOLOGY Cell Survival/DRUG
EFFECTS Cells, Cultured Giant Cells/*DRUG EFFECTS Human HIV/*DRUG
EFFECTS/PATHOGENICITY HIV Seropositivity/BLOOD Lipoproteins, HDL/BLOOD
Molecular Sequence Data Peptides/PHARMACOLOGY Polioviruses/DRUG
EFFECTS Protein Conformation Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Support, U.S.
Gov't, P.H.S. JOURNAL ARTICLE