The cell death-inducing ability of glycoprotein 120 from different HIV strains correlates with their ability to induce CD4 lateral association with CD95 on CD4(+) T cells
F. Bottarel et al., The cell death-inducing ability of glycoprotein 120 from different HIV strains correlates with their ability to induce CD4 lateral association with CD95 on CD4(+) T cells, AIDS RES H, 15(14), 1999, pp. 1255-1263
CD4 cross-linking by HIV gp120 triggers CD4(+) T cell death. Several author
s have suggested that this effect is mediated by CD95, but this possibility
is debated by other authors. In a previous work, we found by cocapping tha
t gp120(451) and gp120(MN), but not gp120(IIIB), induce lateral association
of CD4 with CD95 on the T cell surface. In this work, we used fluorescence
resonance energy transfer to confirm that CD4/CD95 lateral association is
induced by gp120(451), but not gp120(IIIB) Moreover, we found that gp120 ab
ility to induce the CD4/CD95 association correlates with ability to induce
cell death, since gp120(451) and gp120(MN) induced higher levels of cell de
ath than did gp120(IIIB) in PHA-derived CD4(+) T cell lines. CD95 involveme
nt in gp120-induced cell death was confirmed by showing that gp120(451) and
gp120(MN) did not induce death in CD4(+) T cells derived from patients wit
h autoimmune/lymphoproliferative disease (ALD) and decreased CD95 function,
Cell death induced by gp120(MN) was inhibited by a recombinant CD95/IgG.Fc
molecule blocking the CD95/CD95L interaction, However, inhibition was late
and only partial, These data suggest that the gp120-induced CD4/CD95 assoc
iation exerts a dual effect: an early effect that is independent of CD95L a
nd may be due to direct triggering of CD95 by gp120, and a late effect that
may be due to sensitization of CD95 to triggering by CD95L. In line with t
he former effect, cell treatment with gp120(MN) activated caspase 3 in the
presence of Fas/IgG.Fc, which shows that cell death induced by gp120(MN) in
dependently of CD95L uses the same pathway as CD95.