Processing, Secretion, and Anti-HIV-1 Activity of IL-16 With or Without a Signal Peptide in CD4+ T Cells

  • Zhou P
  • Devadas K
  • Tewari D
  • et al.
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Abstract

CD4+ T cells transfected with the C-terminal 130 aa of human IL-16 are rendered resistant to HIV infection. Whether the constitutively expressed IL-16 acts intracellularly, extracellularly, or both is not clear. To address this question and to further study the processing of IL-16, new constructs containing either the C-terminal 130 aa or the C-terminal 100 aa (PDZ-like motif) were constructed with and without a signal peptide. Pulse-chase experiments and treatment of cells with brefeldin A and/or tunicamycin showed that IL-16 is secreted despite the absence of a signal peptide, but with a signal peptide IL-16 is processed through the endoplasmic reticulum-golgi pathway and is glycosylated. Cells expressing IL-16 linked to a signal peptide secrete considerably more IL-16 into the supernatant than cells expressing IL-16 without a signal peptide and are considerably more resistant to HIV replication. Resistance extends to almost 25 days for cells expressing IL-16 with signal peptide as compared with only 15 days for cells without signal peptide. Cells expressing the C-terminal 100 aa not linked to a signal peptide are poor secretors of IL-16 and show little if any resistance to HIV. In contrast, cells expressing the C-terminal 100 aa linked to a signal peptide secrete IL-16 and are resistant to HIV replication. It is concluded that the secretion of IL-16 is required for HIV inhibition.

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Zhou, P., Devadas, K., Tewari, D., Jegorow, A., & Notkins, A. L. (1999). Processing, Secretion, and Anti-HIV-1 Activity of IL-16 With or Without a Signal Peptide in CD4+ T Cells. The Journal of Immunology, 163(2), 906–912. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.163.2.906

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