4.4 Article

Virion-associated cholesterol is critical for the maintenance of HIV-1 structure and infectivity

Journal

AIDS
Volume 16, Issue 17, Pages 2253-2261

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/00002030-200211220-00004

Keywords

envelope proteins; lipid; molecular biology; retrovirus; viral infections; virus proteins

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Objective: HIV-1 particles are enriched with cholesterol; however, the significance of this cholesterol enrichment is unknown. This study examines the structural and functional roles of cholesterol in HIV-1 replication. Methods: Using methyl-p-cyclodextrin (CD) to remove cholesterol from the HIV-1 envelope, buoyant density and infectivity of the cholesterol-deficient HIV-1 particles were compared with the untreated control. The specificity and requirement of cholesterol as an HIV-1-associated lipid were investigated by replenishing cholesterol-deficient HIV-1 with cholesterol, cholestenone (a cholesterol structural analogue) or sphingomyelin (a structurally unrelated yet virion-associated lipid). Results: CD-mediated removal of virion cholesterol increased the buoyant density of virion particles and reduced HIV-1 infectivity. Trans-supplementation of exogenous cholesterol rescued the defects associated with CD-induced cholesterol depletion in HIV-1. However, the restoration of viral infectivity could not be achieved by transsupplementation of either cholestenone or sphingomyelin. Conclusion: This study provides the first direct evidence that HIV-1-associated cholesterol is important for the maintenance of virion structure and infectivity. While the buoyant density of cholesterol-defective HIV-1 can be restored by a cholesterol structural analogue, cholestenone, the requirement for cholesterol is essential for HIV-1 infectivity. (C) 2002 Lippincott Williams Wilkins.

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