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Recent studies provide compelling evidence that HIV-1 entry in cell lines and lymphocytes proceeds by endocytosis, but these studies are still lacking in macrophages, an important natural target cell for HIV-1. Macrophages exhibit continual and extensive endocytic activity as part of their natural functions, so we investigated the uptake pathways involved in productive HIV-1 entry. We find that caveolae are not utilised by HIV-1, because the main structural proteins, caveolin-1 and 2 are absent from most human leukocytes. We then focused on macropinocytosis; we find that HIV-1 entry into macrophages is sensitive to inhibitors of Na(+)/H(+) exchange, actin rearrangement, dynamin, Rho family GTPases, and Pak1, but not to inhibitors of PI-3 kinase and myosin II. This leads us to conclude that HIV entry into macrophages proceeds by an endocytic pathway that is not classical macropinocytosis. Because of the limitations of a purely pharmacological study such as this, the final elucidation of this pathway awaits the development of reliable forward genetic approaches in authentic macrophages.

Original publication

DOI

10.1016/j.virol.2010.10.018

Type

Journal article

Journal

Virology

Publication Date

20/01/2011

Volume

409

Pages

234 - 250

Keywords

Cells, Cultured, Dynamins, Endocytosis, HIV-1, Humans, Macrophages, Virus Internalization, p21-Activated Kinases, rac1 GTP-Binding Protein