CXCR4 and CCR5 Expression Delineates Targets for HIV-1 Disruption of T Cell Differentiation

  • Berkowitz R
  • Beckerman K
  • Schall T
  • et al.
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Abstract

HIV-1 disease is often associated with CD4+ T lymphopenia as well as quantitative reductions in naive CD8+ T cells and cytopenias involving nonlymphoid hemopoietic lineages. Studies in HIV-1-infected humans as well as in animal models of lentivirus disease indicate that these effects may be secondary to infection and destruction of multilineage and lineage-restricted hemopoietic progenitor cells. To define the stages of T cell differentiation that might be susceptible to HIV-1, we performed flow cytometric analysis of the surface expression of CXCR4 and CCR5 on T cells and their progenitors from fetal tissue, cord blood, SCID-hu Thy/Liv mice, and adult peripheral blood. We found that CXCR4 is expressed at low levels on hemopoietic progenitors in the bone marrow, is highly expressed on immature (CD3−CD4+CD8−) T cell progenitors in the thymus, and then is down-regulated during thymocyte differentiation. As thymocytes leave the thymus and enter the peripheral circulation, the expression of CXCR4 is again up-regulated. In contrast, CCR5 is undetectable on most hemopoietic progenitors in the bone marrow and on intrathymic T progenitor cells. It is up-regulated when thymocytes coexpress CD4 and CD8, then down-regulated either in the thymus (CD4+ cells) or during exit from the thymus (CD8+ cells). These results indicate that discrete, lineage-related populations of T cell progenitors may vary widely in their potential to respond to chemokines and to be infected by HIV-1, and that T lymphoid differentiation is particularly vulnerable to CXCR4-using viruses.

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Berkowitz, R. D., Beckerman, K. P., Schall, T. J., & McCune, J. M. (1998). CXCR4 and CCR5 Expression Delineates Targets for HIV-1 Disruption of T Cell Differentiation. The Journal of Immunology, 161(7), 3702–3710. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.161.7.3702

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