Rapid progression to AIDS in HIV+ individuals with a structural variant of the chemokine receptor CX3CR1.

Article Details

Citation

Faure S, Meyer L, Costagliola D, Vaneensberghe C, Genin E, Autran B, Delfraissy JF, McDermott DH, Murphy PM, Debre P, Theodorou I, Combadiere C

Rapid progression to AIDS in HIV+ individuals with a structural variant of the chemokine receptor CX3CR1.

Science. 2000 Mar 24;287(5461):2274-7. doi: 10.1126/science.287.5461.2274.

PubMed ID
10731151 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) enters cells in vitro via CD4 and a coreceptor. Which of 15 known coreceptors are important in vivo is poorly defined but may be inferred from disease-modifying mutations, as for CCR5. Here two single nucleotide polymorphisms are described in Caucasians in CX3CR1, an HIV coreceptor and leukocyte chemotactic/adhesion receptor for the chemokine fractalkine. HIV-infected patients homozygous for CX3CR1-I249 M280, a variant haplotype affecting two amino acids (isoleucine-249 and methionine-280), progressed to AIDS more rapidly than those with other haplotypes. Functional CX3CR1 analysis showed that fractalkine binding is reduced among patients homozygous for this particular haplotype. Thus, CX3CR1-I249 M280 is a recessive genetic risk factor in HIV/AIDS.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
CX3C chemokine receptor 1P49238Details