1. Circulating human CD4 and CD8 T cells do not have large intracellular pools of CCR5.
- Author
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Pilch-Cooper HA, Sieg SF, Hope TJ, Koons A, Escola JM, Offord R, Veazey RS, Mosier DE, Clagett B, Medvik K, Jadlowsky JK, Chance MR, Kiselar JG, Hoxie JA, Collman RG, Riddick NE, Mercanti V, Hartley O, and Lederman MM
- Subjects
- Blotting, Western, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes chemistry, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes chemistry, Cell Separation, Cytoplasm chemistry, Cytoplasm metabolism, False Positive Reactions, Flow Cytometry, Humans, Receptors, CCR5 analysis, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, Tissue Fixation, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes metabolism, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes metabolism, Receptors, CCR5 metabolism
- Abstract
CC Chemokine Receptor 5 (CCR5) is an important mediator of chemotaxis and the primary coreceptor for HIV-1. A recent report by other researchers suggested that primary T cells harbor pools of intracellular CCR5. With the use of a series of complementary techniques to measure CCR5 expression (antibody labeling, Western blot, quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction), we established that intracellular pools of CCR5 do not exist and that the results obtained by the other researchers were false-positives that arose because of the generation of irrelevant binding sites for anti-CCR5 antibodies during fixation and permeabilization of cells.
- Published
- 2011
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