Hepatitis C virus glycoproteins mediate pH-dependent cell entry of pseudotyped retroviral particles

Hsu M., Zhang J., Flint M., Logvinoff C., Cheng-Mayer C., Rice CM., McKeating JA.

HIV pseudotypes bearing native hepatitis C virus (HCV) glycoproteins (strain H and Con1) are infectious for the human hepatoma cell lines Huh-7 and PLC/PR5. Infectivity depends on coexpression of both E1 and E2 glycoproteins, is pH-dependent, and can be neutralized by mAbs mapping to amino acids 412–447 within E2. Cell-surface expression of one or all of the candidate receptor molecules (CD81, low-density lipoprotein receptor, scavenger receptor class B type 1, and dendritic cell-specific intercellular adhesion molecule 3 grabbing nonintegrin) failed to confer permissivity to HIV–HCV pseudotype infection. However, HIV–HCV pseudotype infectivity was inhibited by a recombinant soluble form of CD81 and a mAb specific for CD81, suggesting that CD81 may be a component of a receptor complex.

DOI

10.1073/pnas.0832180100

Type

Journal article

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Publication Date

2003-06-10T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

100

Pages

7271 - 7276

Total pages

5

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