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1.
S Basu  H E Varmus 《Journal of virology》1990,64(11):5617-5625
The integration protein (IN) of Moloney murine leukemia virus (MuLV), purified after being produced in yeast cells, has been analyzed for its ability to bind its putative viral substrates, the att sites. An electrophoretic mobility shift assay revealed that the Moloney MuLV IN protein binds synthetic oligonucleotides containing att sequences, with specificity towards its cognate (MuLV) sequences. The terminal 13 base pairs, which are identical at both ends of viral DNA, are sufficient for binding if present at the ends of oligonucleotide duplexes in the same orientation as in linear viral DNA. However, only weak binding was observed when the same sequences were positioned within a substrate in a manner simulating att junctions in circular viral DNA with two long terminal repeats. Binding to att sites in oligonucleotides simulating linear viral DNA was dependent on the presence of the highly conserved CA residues preceding the site for 3' processing (an IN-dependent reaction that removes two nucleotides from the 3' ends of linear viral DNA); mutation of CA to TG abolished binding, and a CA to TA change reduced affinity by at least 20-fold. Removal of either the terminal two base pairs from both ends of the oligonucleotide duplex or the terminal two nucleotides from the 3' ends of each strand did not affect binding. The removal of three 3' terminal nucleotides, however, abolished binding, suggesting an essential role for the A residue immediately upstream of the 3' processing site in the binding reaction. These results help define the sequence requirements for att site recognition by IN, explain the conservation of the subterminal CA dinucleotide, and provide a simple assay for sequence-specific IN activity.  相似文献   

2.
3.
Retroviral DNA integration requires the activity of at least one viral protein, the integrase (IN) protein. We cloned and expressed the integrase gene of feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) in Escherichia coli as a fusion to the malE gene and purified the IN fusion protein by affinity chromatography. The protein is active in site-specific cleavage of the viral DNA ends, DNA strand transfer, and disintegration. FIV IN has a relaxed viral DNA substrate requirement: it cleaves and integrates FIV DNA termini, human immunodeficiency virus DNA ends, and Moloney murine leukemia virus DNA ends with high efficiencies. In the cleavage reaction, IN exposes a specific phosphodiester bond near the viral DNA end to nucleophilic attack. In vitro, either H2O, glycerol, or the 3' OH group of the viral DNA terminus can serve as nucleophile in this reaction. We found that FIV IN preferentially uses the 3' OH ends of the viral DNA as nucleophile, whereas HIV IN protein preferentially uses H2O and glycerol as nucleophiles.  相似文献   

4.
Retroviral integrase (IN) cleaves linear viral DNA specifically near the ends of the DNA (cleavage reaction) and subsequently couples the processed ends to phosphates in the target DNA (integration reaction). In vitro, IN catalyzes the disintegration reaction, which is the reverse of the integration reaction. Ideally, we would like to test the role of each amino acid in the IN protein. We mutagenized human immunodeficiency virus type 2 IN in a random way using PCR mutagenesis and generated a set of mutants in which 35% of all residues were substituted. Mutant proteins were tested for in vitro activity, e.g., site-specific cleavage of viral DNA, integration, and disintegration. Changes in 61 of the 90 proteins investigated showed no phenotypic effect. Substitutions that changed the choice of nucleophile in the cleavage reaction were found. These clustered around the active-site residues Asp-116 and Glu-152. We also found alterations of amino acids that affected cleavage and integration differentially. In addition, we analyzed the disintegration activity of the proteins and found substitutions of amino acids close to the dimer interface that enhanced intermolecular disintegration activity, whereas other catalytic activities were present at wild-type levels. This study shows the feasibility of investigating the role of virtually any amino acid in a protein the size of IN.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Retroviral integration requires cis-acting sequences at the termini of linear double-stranded viral DNA and a product of the retroviral pol gene, the integrase protein (IN). IN is required and sufficient for generation of recessed 3' termini of the viral DNA (the first step in proviral integration) and for integration of the recessed DNA species in vitro. Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) IN, expressed in Escherichia coli, was purified to near homogeneity. The substrate sequence requirements for specific cleavage and integration of retroviral DNA were studied in a physical assay, using purified IN and short duplex oligonucleotides that correspond to the termini of HIV DNA. A few point mutations around the IN cleavage site substantially reduced cleavage; most other mutations did not have a drastic effect, suggesting that the sequence requirements are limited. The terminal 15 bp of the retroviral DNA were demonstrated to be sufficient for recognition by IN. Efficient specific cutting of the retroviral DNA by IN required that the cleavage site, the phosphodiester bond at the 3' side of a conserved CA-3' dinucleotide, be located two nucleotides away from the end of the viral DNA; however, low-efficiency cutting was observed when the cleavage site was located one, three, four, or five nucleotides away from the terminus of the double-stranded viral DNA. Increased cleavage by IN was detected when the nucleotides 3' of the CA-3' dinucleotide were present as single-stranded DNA. IN was found to have a strong preference for promoting integration into double-stranded rather than single-stranded DNA.  相似文献   

7.
The integrase (IN) protein of the human immunodeficiency virus mediates integration of the viral DNA into the cellular genome. In vitro, this reaction can be mimicked by using purified recombinant IN and model DNA substrates. IN mediates two reactions: an endonucleolytic cleavage at each 3' end of the proviral DNA (terminal cleavage) and the joining of the linear viral DNA to 5' phosphates in the target DNA (strand transfer). Previous investigators have shown that purified IN requires Mn2+ or Mg2+ to promote strand transfer in vitro, although Mg2+ is the likely metal cofactor in vivo. IN activity in the presence of Mg2+ in vitro requires high IN concentrations and low concentrations of salt. Here, we show that the viral nucleocapsid protein NCp7 allows efficient IN-mediated strand transfer in the presence of Mg2+ at low enzyme concentrations. This potentiating effect appears to be unique to NCp7, as other small DNA-binding proteins, while capable of stimulating integration in the presence of Mn2+, all failed to stimulate strand transfer in the presence of Mg2+.  相似文献   

8.
Retroviral integrase (IN) recognizes linear viral DNA ends and introduces nicks adjacent to a highly conserved CA dinucleotide usually located two base pairs from the 3'-ends of viral DNA (the "processing" reaction). In a second step, the same IN active site catalyzes the insertion of these ends into host DNA (the "joining" reaction). Both DNA sequence and DNA structure contribute to specific recognition of viral DNA ends by IN. Here we used potassium permanganate modification to show that the avian sarcoma virus IN catalytic domain is able to distort viral DNA ends in vitro. This distortion activity is consistent with both unpairing and unstacking of the three terminal base pairs, including the processing site adjacent to the conserved CA. Furthermore, the introduction of mismatch mutations that destabilize the viral DNA ends were found to stimulate the IN processing reaction as well as IN-mediated distortion. End-distortion activity was also observed with mutant or heterologous DNA substrates. However, further analyses showed that using Mn(2+) as a cofactor, processing site specificity of these substrates was also maintained. Our results support a model whereby unpairing and unstacking of the terminal base pairs is a required step in the processing reaction. Furthermore, these results are consistent with our previous observations indicating that unpairing of target DNA promotes the joining reaction.  相似文献   

9.
M Katzman  R A Katz  A M Skalka    J Leis 《Journal of virology》1989,63(12):5319-5327
The purified integration protein (IN) of avian myeloblastosis virus is shown to nick double-stranded oligodeoxynucleotide substrates that mimic the ends of the linear form of viral DNA. In the presence of Mg2+, nicks are created 2 nucleotides from the 3' OH ends of both the U5 plus strand and the U3 minus strand. Similar cleavage is observed in the presence of Mn2+ but only when the extent of the reaction is limited. Neither the complementary strands nor sequences representing the termini of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 DNA were cleaved at analogous positions. Analysis of a series of substrates containing U5 base substitutions has defined the sequence requirements for site-selective nicking; nucleotides near the cleavage site are most critical for activity. The minimum substrate size required to demonstrate significant activity corresponds to the nearly perfect 15-base terminal inverted repeat. This in vitro activity of IN thus produces viral DNA ends that are joined to host DNA in vivo and corresponds to an expected early step in the integrative recombination reaction. These results provide the first enzymatic support using purified retroviral proteins for a linear DNA precursor to the integrated provirus.  相似文献   

10.
Substrate specificity of Ty1 integrase.   总被引:6,自引:2,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
Integration of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae retrotransposon Ty1 requires the element-encoded integrase (IN) protein, which is a component of cytoplasmic virus-like particles (VLPs). Using purified recombinant Ty1 IN and an oligonucleotide integration assay based on Ty1 long terminal repeat sequences, we have compared IN activity on substrates having either wild-type or altered donor ends. IN showed a marked preference for blunt-end substrates terminating in an A:T pair over substrates ending in a G:C pair or a 3' dideoxyadenosine. VLP activity on representative substrates also showed preference for donor strands which have an adenosine terminus. Staggered-end substrates showed little activity when nucleotides were removed from the end of the wild-type donor strand, but removal of one nucleotide from the complementary strand did not significantly diminish activity. Removal of additional nucleotides from the complementary strand reduced activity to minimal detection levels. These results suggest that the sequence specificity of Ty1 IN is not stringent in vitro. The absence of Ty1 IN-mediated 3' dinucleotide cleavage, a characteristic of retroviral integrases, was demonstrated by using selected substrates. In addition to the forward reaction, both recombinant IN and VLP-associated IN carry out the reverse disintegration reaction with long terminal repeat-based dumbbell substrates. Disintegration activity exhibits sequence preferences similar to those observed for the forward reaction.  相似文献   

11.
Bera S  Vora AC  Chiu R  Heyduk T  Grandgenett DP 《Biochemistry》2005,44(46):15106-15114
The integration of retroviral DNA by the viral integrase (IN) into the host genome occurs via assembled preintegration complexes (PIC). We investigated this assembly process using purified IN and viral DNA oligodeoxynucleotide (ODN) substrates (93 bp in length) that were labeled with donor (Cy3) and acceptor fluorophores (Cy5). The fluorophores were attached to the 5' 2 bp overhangs of the terminal attachment (att) sites recognized by IN. Addition of IN to the assay mixture containing the fluorophore-labeled ODN resulted in synaptic complex formation at 14 degrees C with significant fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) occurring between the fluorophores in close juxtaposition (from approximately 15 to 100 A). Subsequent integration assays at 37 degrees C with the same ODN (32P-labeled) demonstrated a direct association of a significant FRET signal with concerted insertion of the two ODNs into the circular DNA target, here termed full-site integration. FRET measurements (deltaF) show that IN binds to a particular set of 3' OH recessed substrates (type I) generating synaptic complexes capable of full-site integration that, as shown previously, exhibit IN mediated protection from DNaseI digestion up to approximately 20 bp from the ODN att ends. In contrast, IN also formed complexes with nonspecific DNA ends and loss-of-function att end substrates (type II) that had significantly lower deltaF values and were not capable of full-site integration, and lacked the DNaseI protection properties. The type II category may exemplify what is commonly understood as "nonspecific" binding by IN to DNA ends. Two IN mutants that exhibited little or no integration activity gave rise to the lower deltaF signals. Our FRET analysis provided the first direct physical evidence that IN forms synaptic complexes with two DNA att sites in vitro, yielding a complex that exhibits properties comparable to that of the PIC.  相似文献   

12.
Using purified integration protein (IN) from human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 and oligonucleotide mimics of viral and target DNA, we have investigated the DNA sequence specificity of the cleaving and joining reactions that take place during retroviral integration. The first reaction in this process is selective endonucleolytic cleaving of the viral DNA terminus that generates a recessed 3' OH group. This 3' OH group is then joined to a 5' phosphoryl group located at a break in the target DNA. We found that the conserved CA located close to the 3' end of the plus strand of the U5 viral terminus (also present on the minus strand of the U3 terminus) was required for both cleaving and joining reactions. Six bases of HIV U5 or U3 DNA at the ends of model substrates were sufficient for nearly maximal levels of selective endonucleolytic cleaving and joining. However, viral sequence elements upstream of the terminal 6 bases could also affect the efficiencies of the cleaving and joining reactions. The penultimate base (C) on the minus strand of HIV U5 was required for optimal joining activity. A synthetic oligonucleotide mimic of the putative in vivo viral "DNA" substrate for HIV IN, a molecule that contained a terminal adenosine 5'-phosphate (rA) on the minus strand, was indistinguishable in the cleaving and joining reactions from the DNA substrate containing deoxyadenosine instead of adenosine 5'-phosphate at the terminal position. Single-stranded DNA served as an in vitro integration target for HIV IN. The DNA sequence specificity of the joining reaction catalyzed in the reverse direction was also investigated.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Retrovirus preintegration complexes (PIC) in virus-infected cells contain the linear viral DNA genome (approximately 10 kbp), viral proteins including integrase (IN), and cellular proteins. After transport of the PIC into the nucleus, IN catalyzes the concerted insertion of the two viral DNA ends into the host chromosome. This successful insertion process is termed "full-site integration." Reconstitution of nucleoprotein complexes using recombinant human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) IN and model viral DNA donor substrates (approximately 0.30 to 0.48 kbp in length) that are capable of catalyzing efficient full-site integration has proven difficult. Many of the products are half-site integration reactions where either IN inserts only one end of the viral donor substrate into a circular DNA target or into other donors. In this report, we have purified recombinant HIV-1 IN at pH 6.8 in the presence of MgSO4 that performed full-site integration nearly as efficiently as HIV-1 PIC. The size of the viral DNA substrate was significantly increased to 4.1 kbp, thus allowing for the number of viral DNA ends and the concentrations of IN in the reaction mixtures to be decreased by a factor of approximately 10. In a typical reaction at 37 degrees C, recombinant HIV-1 IN at 5 to 10 nM incorporated 30 to 40% of the input DNA donor into full-site integration products. The synthesis of full-site products continued up to approximately 2 h, comparable to incubation times used with HIV-1 PIC. Approximately 5% of the input donor was incorporated into the circular target producing half-site products with no significant quantities of other integration products produced. DNA sequence analysis of the viral DNA-target junctions derived from wild-type U3 and U5 coupled reactions showed an approximately 70% fidelity for the HIV-1 5-bp host site duplications. Recombinant HIV-1 IN successfully utilized a mutant U5 end containing additional nucleotide extensions for full-site integration demonstrating that IN worked properly under nonideal active substrate conditions. The fidelity of the 5-bp host site duplications was also high with these coupled mutant U5 and wild-type U3 donor ends. These studies suggest that recombinant HIV-1 IN is at least as capable as native IN in virus particles and approaching that observed with HIV-1 PIC for catalyzing full-site integration.  相似文献   

15.
The integrase (IN) protein of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is required for specific cleavage of the viral DNA termini, and subsequent integration of the viral DNA into target DNA. To identify the various domains of the IN protein we generated a series of IN deletion mutants as fusions to maltose-binding protein (MBP). The deletion mutants were tested for their ability to bind DNA, to mediate site-specific cleavage of the viral DNA ends, and to carry out integration and disintegration reactions. We found that the DNA-binding region resides between amino acids 200 and 270 of the 288-residues HIV-1 IN protein. The catalytic domain of the protein was mapped between amino acids 50 and 194. For the specific activities of IN, cleavage of the viral DNA and integration, both the DNA-binding domain and the conserved amino-terminal region of IN are required. These regions are dispensable however, for disintegration activity.  相似文献   

16.
The integration of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 DNA into the host cell genome is catalysed by the viral integrase (IN). The reaction consists of a 3'-processing [dinucleotide released from each 3' end of the viral long terminal repeat (LTR)] followed by a strand transfer (insertion of the viral genome into the human chromosome). A 17 base pair oligonucleotide d(GGAAAATCTCTAGCAGT), d(ACTGCTAGAGATTTTCC) reproducing the U5-LTR extremity of viral DNA that contains the IN attachment site was analysed by NMR using the classical NOEs and scalar coupling constants in conjunction with a small set of residual dipolar coupling constants (RDCs) measured at the 13C/15N natural abundance. The combination of these two types of parameters in calculations significantly improved the DNA structure determination. The well-known features of A-tracts were clearly identified by RDCs in the first part of the molecule. The binding/cleavage site at the viral DNA end is distinguishable by a loss of regular base stacking and a distorted minor groove that can aid its specific recognition by IN.  相似文献   

17.
The retroviral integrase (IN) carries out the integration of the viral DNA into the host genome. Both IN and the DNA sequences at the viral long-terminal repeat (LTR) are required for the integration function. In this report, a series of minor groove binding hairpin polyamides targeting sequences within terminal inverted repeats of the Moloney murine leukemia virus (M-MuLV) LTR were synthesized, and their effects on integration were analyzed. Using cell-free in vitro integration assays, polyamides targeting the conserved CA dinucleotide with cognate sites closest to the terminal base pairs were effective at blocking 3' processing but not strand transfer. Polyamides which efficiently inhibited 3' processing and strand transfer targeted the LTR sequences through position 9. Polyamides that inhibited integration were effective at nanomolar concentrations and showed subnanomolar affinity for their cognate LTR sites. These studies highlight the role of minor groove interactions within the LTR termini for retroviral integration.  相似文献   

18.
The in vitro assembly process for forming nucleoprotein complexes containing linear retrovirus-like DNA and integrase (IN) was investigated. Solution conditions that allowed avian myeloblastosis virus IN to efficiently pair two separate linear DNA fragments (each 487 bp in length) containing 3' OH recessed long terminal repeat termini were established. Pairing of the viral termini by IN during preincubation on ice permitted these nucleoprotein complexes to catalyze the concerted insertion of the two termini into a circular DNA target (full-site reaction), mimicking the in vivo reaction. The three major solution determinants were high concentrations of NaCl (0.33 M), 1,4-dioxane, and polyethylene glycol. The aprotic solvent dioxane (15%) was significantly better (sixfold) than 15% dimethyl sulfoxide for forming complexes capable of full-site rather than half-site integration events. Half-site reactions by IN involved the insertion of a single donor terminus into circular pGEM. Although NaCl was essential for the efficient promotion of the concerted integration reaction, dioxane was necessary to prevent half-site reactions from occurring at high NaCl concentrations. Under optimal solution conditions, the concerted integration reaction was directly proportional to a sixfold range of IN. The complexes appeared not to turn over, and few half-site donor-donor molecules were produced. In the presence of 0.15 or 0.35 M NaCl, dioxane prevented efficient 3' OH trimming of a blunt-ended donor by IN, suggesting that the complexes formed by IN with blunt-ended donors were different from those formed with donors containing 3' OH recessed termini for strand transfer. The results suggest that IN alone was capable of protein-protein and protein-DNA interactions that efficiently promote the in vitro concerted integration reaction.  相似文献   

19.
We have reconstituted concerted human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) integration with specially designed mini-donor DNA, a supercoiled plasmid acceptor, purified bacterial-derived HIV-1 integrase (IN), and host HMG-I(Y) protein (Hindmarsh, P., Ridky, T., Reeves, R., Andrake, M., Skalka, A. M., and Leis, J. (1999) J. Virol. 73, 2994-3003). Integration in this system is dependent upon the mini donor DNA having IN recognition sequences at both ends and the reaction products have all of the features associated with integration of viral DNA in vivo. Using this system, we explored the relationship between the HIV-1 U3 and U5 IN recognition sequences by analyzing substrates that contain either two U3 or two U5 terminal sequences. Both substrates caused severe defects to integration but with different effects on the mechanism indicating that the U3 and the U5 sequences are both required for concerted DNA integration. We have also used the reconstituted system to compare the mechanism of integration catalyzed by HIV-1 to that of avian sarcoma virus by analyzing the effect of defined mutations introduced into U3 or U5 ends of the respective wild type DNA substrates. Despite sequence differences between avian sarcoma virus and HIV-1 IN and their recognition sequences, the consequences of analogous base pair substitutions at the same relative positions of the respective IN recognition sequences were very similar. This highlights the common mechanism of integration shared by these two different viruses.  相似文献   

20.
S Q Wei  K Mizuuchi    R Craigie 《The EMBO journal》1997,16(24):7511-7520
We have probed the nucleoprotein organization of Moloney murine leukemia virus (MLV) pre-integration complexes using a novel footprinting technique that utilizes a simplified in vitro phage Mu transposition system. We find that several hundred base pairs at each end of the viral DNA are organized in a large nucleoprotein complex, which we call the intasome. This structure is not formed when pre-integration complexes are made by infecting cells with integrase-minus virus, demonstrating a requirement for integrase. In contrast, footprinting of internal regions of the viral DNA did not reveal significant differences between pre-integration complexes with and without integrase. Treatment with high salt disrupts the intasome in parallel with loss of intermolecular integration activity. We show that a cellular factor is required for reconstitution of the intasome. Finally, we demonstrate that DNA-protein interactions involving extensive regions at the ends of the viral DNA are functionally important for retroviral DNA integration activity. Current in vitro integration systems utilizing purified integrase lack the full fidelity of the in vivo reaction. Our results indicate that both host factors and long viral DNA substrates may be required to reconstitute an in vitro system with all the hallmarks of DNA integration in vivo.  相似文献   

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