S. Beddows et al., HIV REPLICATION IN CD4-NEGATIVE CELL-LINES - EFFECT OF CLONING, CD4 EXPRESSION AND INHIBITION BY DEXTRIN SULFATE, Antiviral chemistry & chemotherapy, 4(3), 1993, pp. 173-177
HIV-1 infects CD4 negative (CD4-) cell lines with low efficiency. Infe
cted CD4- cells have a low copy number of HIV proviruses per cell and
require a high multiplicity of infection. Following CD4 transfection,
most human cell lines permit high efficiency HIV entry and replication
. We have compared entry and inhibition of HIV-1 into CD4- cells and t
heir equivalent CD4 positive (CD4+) transfectants. Entry of HIV-1 into
both CD4+ and CD4- was completely inhibited by a novel sulphated poly
saccharide, dextrin sulphate (DS) at 100 mug ml-1, whereas anti-CD4 an
tibodies only inhibited HIV infection of CD4+ cells. One glial cell li
ne, U251SP-CD4, expressed surface CD4, but this did not increase HIV-1
susceptibility compared to the CD4- U251SP cell line. Subclones of th
e CD4- cell lines TE671 and U251SP were no more permissive for infecti
on than their corresponding parental line. HIV-1 infected CD4 cells ha
ve a significantly lower provirus copy number than CD4+ cells, confirm
ing that the block to HIV-1 replication is predominantly at entry. The
action of DS was examined in conjunction with soluble recombinant CD4
(srCD4); DS was found to potentiate the inhibiting effect of srCD4.