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Lateral diffusion of CD4 on the surface of a human neoplastic T-cell line probed with a fluorescent derivative of the envelope glycoprotein (gp120) of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)

✍ Scribed by Ranajit Pal; B. C. Nair; George M. Hoke; M. G. Sarngadharan; Michael Edidin


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1991
Tongue
English
Weight
862 KB
Volume
147
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9541

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✦ Synopsis


The envelope glycoprotein (gpl20) of HIV-1 was labeled with fluorescein by using 6- [4,6-dichlorotriazinyl]aminofluorescein. The labeled glycoprotein was found to bind to CD4-positive CEM cells. Monoclonal antibody OKT4a but not OKT4 blocked this binding. Similar specific binding of fluorescein-labeled gpl20 with CD4 was observed in a solid-phase ELISA where sCD4 was attached to a polystyrene plate. The syncytium formation induced by HIV-1 -infected cells on CEM cells was significantly inhibited in the presence of fluorescein-labeled gpl20. Fluorescence photobleaching recovery measurements showed that the diffusion coefficient (D) of CD4 molecules complexed with fluorescein-labeled gp120 was approximately 5 x 10~'0cm2sec-', with nearly 61 % of the receptor molecules being mobile. Binding of anti-gpl20 monoclonal antibody to the CD4-gpl20 complex reduced the mobile fraction significantly. Diffusion of CD4 labeled with OKT4 IgG was markedly inhibited with reductions in both D and the mobile fraction, but such inhibition was not observed with OKT4 Fab. It appears that crosslinking of multiple molecules of CD4 by OKT4 antibody is required to reduce CD4 mobility. This suggests that the receptor might be present on the membrane plane as molecular clusters containing at least two molecules of CD4.