Although the CD4 molecule is the principal cellular receptor for the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), several CD4-negative cell lines are susceptible to infection with one or more HIV strains. These findings indicate that there are alternate modes of viral entry, perhaps involving one or more receptor molecules. Antibodies against galactosyl ceramide (galactocerebroside, or GalC) inhibited viral internalization and infection in two CD4-negative cell lines derived from the nervous system: U373-MG and SK-N-MC. Furthermore, recombinant HIV surface glycoprotein gp120 bound to GalC but not to other glycolipids. These results suggest a role for GalC or a highly related molecule in HIV entry into neural cells.
To investigate the mechanism underlying one aspect of the cellular tropism of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), we used a macrophage-tropic isolate, 89.6, and screened its ability to infect a number of continuous cell lines. HIV-1(89.6) was able to replicate robustly in a T-cell/B-cell hybrid line, CEMx174, while it replicated modestly or not at all in either of its parents, one of which is the CD4-positive line CEM.3. Analysis by transfection of a molecular clone, a virus uptake assay, and polymerase chain reaction all provided strong evidence that the block to HIV-1(89.6) replication in the CEM.3 line lies at the level of cellular entry. These results were complemented by preparing a CD4-expressing derivative of the B-cell parent, 721.174, and demonstrating that it is permissive for productive HIV-1(89.6) replication. Given these experimental findings, we speculate that there exist cellular accessory factors which facilitate virus entry and infection in CD4-positive cells. Furthermore, these cellular accessory factors may be quite virus strain specific, since not all macrophage-tropic strains of HIV-1 were able to replicate in the CEMx174 hybrid cell line. This experimental model provides a system for the identification of one or more of these putative cellular accessory factors.
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