Abstract
CCR5 is the major HIV-1 entry coreceptor. RANTES/CCL5 analogs are more potent inhibitors of infection than native chemokines; one class activates and internalizes CCR5, one neither activates nor internalizes, and a third partially internalizes without activation. Here we show that mutations in CCR5 transmembrane domains differentially impact the activity of these three inhibitor classes, suggesting that the transmembrane region of CCR5, a key interaction site for inhibitors, is a sensitive molecular switch, modulating receptor activity.
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CITATION STYLE
Choi, W.-T., Nedellec, R., Coetzer, M., Colin, P., Lagane, B., Offord, R. E., … Mosier, D. E. (2012). CCR5 Mutations Distinguish N-Terminal Modifications of RANTES (CCL5) with Agonist versus Antagonist Activity. Journal of Virology, 86(18), 10218–10220. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.00353-12
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