نتایج جستجو برای: گیرنده ccr5

تعداد نتایج: 10087  

Journal: :Journal of virology 2004
Bryce Chackerian Lindsey Briglio Paul S Albert Douglas R Lowy John T Schiller

Antibodies against CCR5, the major coreceptor for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), may have antiviral potential as viral fusion inhibitors. In this study, we generated a virus-like particle (VLP)-based vaccine that effectively breaks B-cell tolerance and elicits autoantibodies against CCR5 in pig-tailed macaques. Initial studies in mice identified a polypeptide comprising the N-term...

Journal: :The Journal of infectious diseases 2008
Jacob Nattermann Roman Sherzada Agathe Iwan Dominik Bogen Ina Maria Niederle Daniela Schulte Eva Mertens Hans Dieter Nischalke Benjamin Krämer Tilman Sauerbruch Ludger Leifeld Ulrich Spengler

In patients with hepatitis C, a loss-of-function mutation of chemokine receptor CCR5 (CCR5Delta32) has been shown to be associated with spontaneous viral clearance and lower levels of hepatic inflammation. In the present study, we show that CCR5 is coexpressed with the inhibitory NKG2A receptor on CD8(+) T cells. Consequently, CCR5(+) T cells were highly susceptible to NKG2A-mediated inhibition...

Journal: :Antiviral chemistry & chemotherapy 2005
Mike Westby Elna van der Ryst

The human chemokine receptors, CCR5 and CXCR4, are potential host targets for exogenous, small-molecule antagonists for the inhibition of HIV-1 infection. HIV-1 strains can be categorised by co-receptor tropism - their ability to utilise CCR5 (CCR5-tropic), CXCR4 (CXCR4-tropic) or both (dual-tropic) as a co-receptor for entry into susceptible cells. CCR5 may be the more suitable co-receptor tar...

Journal: :Journal of immunology 2010
Hongwei H Zhang Kaimei Song Ronald L Rabin Brenna J Hill Stephen P Perfetto Mario Roederer Daniel C Douek Richard M Siegel Joshua M Farber

Because T cells act primarily through short-distance interactions, homing receptors can identify colocalizing cells that serve common functions. Expression patterns for multiple chemokine receptors on CD4(+) T cells from human blood suggested a hierarchy of receptors that are induced and accumulate during effector/memory cell differentiation. We characterized CD4(+)CD45RO(+) T cells based on ex...

Journal: :Circulation 2014
Valérie Amsellem Larissa Lipskaia Shariq Abid Lucie Poupel Amal Houssaini Rozenn Quarck Elisabeth Marcos Nathalie Mouraret Aurélien Parpaleix Régis Bobe Guillaume Gary-Bobo Mirna Saker Jean-Luc Dubois-Randé Mark T Gladwin Karen A Norris Marion Delcroix Christophe Combadière Serge Adnot

BACKGROUND Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PH), whether idiopathic or related to underlying diseases such as HIV infection, results from complex vessel remodeling involving both pulmonary artery smooth muscle cell (PA-SMC) proliferation and inflammation. CCR5, a coreceptor for cellular HIV-1 entry expressed on macrophages and vascular cells, may be involved in the pathogenesis of PH. Maraviroc...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2013
Zahra F Parker Shilpa S Iyer Craig B Wilen Nicholas F Parrish Kelechi C Chikere Fang-Hua Lee Chuka A Didigu Reem Berro Per Johan Klasse Benhur Lee John P Moore George M Shaw Beatrice H Hahn Robert W Doms

Infection by HIV-1 most often results from the successful transmission and propagation of a single virus variant, termed the transmitted/founder (T/F) virus. Here, we compared the attachment and entry properties of envelope (Env) glycoproteins from T/F and chronic control (CC) viruses. Using a panel of 40 T/F and 47 CC Envs, all derived by single genome amplification, we found that 52% of clade...

Journal: :Journal of immunology 2015
Assunta Venuti Claudia Pastori Gabriel Siracusano Agostino Riva Maria Teresa Sciortino Lucia Lopalco

Natural human Abs, recognizing an epitope within the first extramembrane loop of CCR5 (the main HIV coreceptor), induce a long-lasting internalization (48 h) of the protein, whereas all known CCR5 modulating molecules show a short-term kinetics (60-90 min). Despite extensive studies on the regulation of CCR5 signaling cascades, which are the effect of concomitant CCR5 internalization by exogeno...

Journal: :Cancer research 2012
Marco Velasco-Velázquez Xuanmao Jiao Marisol De La Fuente Timothy G Pestell Adam Ertel Michael P Lisanti Richard G Pestell

The roles of the chemokine CCL5 and its receptor CCR5 in breast cancer progression remain unclear. Here, we conducted microarray analysis on 2,254 human breast cancer specimens and found increased expression of CCL5 and its receptor CCR5, but not CCR3, in the basal and HER-2 genetic subtypes. The subpopulation of human breast cancer cell lines found to express CCR5 displayed a functional respon...

2014
Kathleen M. Kelly Carlo G. Tocchetti Alexey Lyashkov Patrick M. Tarwater Djahida Bedja David R. Graham Sarah E. Beck Kelly A. Metcalf Pate Suzanne E. Queen Robert J. Adams Nazareno Paolocci Joseph L. Mankowski

BACKGROUND Diastolic dysfunction is a highly prevalent cardiac abnormality in asymptomatic as well as ART-treated human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) patients. Although the mechanisms underlying depressed cardiac function remain obscure, diastolic dysfunction in SIV-infected rhesus macaques is highly correlated with myocardial viral load. As cardiomyocytes are not productively infected, damage m...

Journal: :Journal of virology 2001
R Sabbe G R Picchio C Pastore O Chaloin O Hartley R Offord D E Mosier

N-terminal modifications of the chemokine RANTES bind to C-C chemokine receptor 5 (CCR5) and block human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection with greater efficacy than native RANTES. Modified RANTES compounds induce rapid CCR5 internalization and much slower receptor reexpression than native RANTES, suggesting that receptor sequestration is one mode of anti-HIV activity. The rates o...

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