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1.
Chen H  Engelman A 《Journal of virology》2000,74(17):8188-8193
Two activities of retroviral integrase, 3' processing and DNA strand transfer, are required to integrate viral cDNA into a host cell chromosome. Integrase activity has been analyzed in vitro using purified protein and recombinant DNA substrates that model the U3 and U5 ends of viral cDNA or by using viral preintegration complexes (PICs) that form during virus infection. Numerous studies have investigated changes in integrase or viral DNA for effects on both 3' processing and DNA strand transfer activities using purified protein, but similar analyses have not been carried out using PICs. Here, we analyzed PICs from human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) strain 604del, an integration-defective mutant lacking 26 bp of U5, and revE1, a revertant of 604del containing an additional 19-bp deletion, for levels of 3' processing activity that occurred in infected cells and for levels of in vitro DNA strand transfer activity. Whereas revE1 supported one-third to one-half of the level of wild-type DNA strand transfer activity, the level of 604del DNA strand transfer activity was undetectable. Surprisingly, integrase similarly processed the 3' ends of 604del and revE1 in vivo. We therefore conclude that 604del is blocked in its ability to replicate in cells after the 3' processing step of retroviral integration. Whereas Western blotting showed that wild-type, revE1, and 604del PICs contained similar levels of integrase protein, Mu-mediated PCR footprinting revealed only minimal protein-DNA complex formation at the ends of 604del cDNA. We propose that 604del is replication defective because proteins important for DNA strand transfer activity do not stably associate with this cDNA after in vivo 3' processing by integrase.  相似文献   

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Integrase is an essential retroviral enzyme, catalyzing the stable integration of reverse transcribed DNA into cellular DNA. Several aspects of the integration mechanism, including the length of host DNA sequence duplication flanking the integrated provirus, which can be from 4 to 6 bp, and the nucleotide preferences at the site of integration, are thought to cluster among the different retroviral genera. To date only the spumavirus prototype foamy virus integrase has provided diffractable crystals of integrase-DNA complexes, revealing unprecedented details on the molecular mechanisms of DNA integration. Here, we characterize five previously unstudied integrase proteins, including those derived from the alpharetrovirus lymphoproliferative disease virus (LPDV), betaretroviruses Jaagsiekte sheep retrovirus (JSRV), and mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV), epsilonretrovirus walleye dermal sarcoma virus (WDSV), and gammaretrovirus reticuloendotheliosis virus strain A (Rev-A) to identify potential novel structural biology candidates. Integrase expressed in bacterial cells was analyzed for solubility, stability during purification, and, once purified, 3′ processing and DNA strand transfer activities in vitro. We show that while we were unable to extract or purify accountable amounts of WDSV, JRSV, or LPDV integrase, purified MMTV and Rev-A integrase each preferentially support the concerted integration of two viral DNA ends into target DNA. The sequencing of concerted Rev-A integration products indicates high fidelity cleavage of target DNA strands separated by 5 bp during integration, which contrasts with the 4 bp duplication generated by a separate gammaretrovirus, the Moloney murine leukemia virus (MLV). By comparing Rev-A in vitro integration sites to those generated by MLV in cells, we concordantly conclude that the spacing of target DNA cleavage is more evolutionarily flexible than are the target DNA base contacts made by integrase during integration. Given their desirable concerted DNA integration profiles, Rev-A and MMTV integrase proteins have been earmarked for structural biology studies.  相似文献   

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Integration of retroviral DNA, an essential step during the retroviral life cycle, is mediated by the viral protein integrase. Simplein vitroassays for measuring integrase activities are described, including catalysis (3′-end processing, 3′-end joining, disintegration), juxtaposition of viral DNA ends, DNA binding, and target site selection. The described assays will be useful in elucidating the molecular mechanism of retroviral integration and screening for integrase inhibitors as potential anti-retroviral drugs.  相似文献   

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The integrase encoded by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) is required for integration of viral DNA into the host cell chromosome. In vitro, integrase mediates a concerted cleavage-ligation reaction (strand transfer) that results in covalent attachment of viral DNA to target DNA. With a substrate that mimics the strand transfer product, integrase carries out disintegration, the reverse of the strand transfer reaction, resolving this integration intermediate into its viral and target DNA parts. We used a set of disintegration substrates to study the catalytic mechanism of HIV-1 integrase and the interaction between the protein and the viral and target DNA sequence. One substrate termed dumbbell consists of a single oligonucleotide that can fold to form a structure that mimics the integration intermediate. Kinetic analysis using the dumbbell substrate showed that integrase turned over, establishing that HIV-1 integrase is an enzyme. Analysis of the disintegration activity on the dumbbell substrate and its derivatives showed that both the viral and target DNA parts of the molecule were required for integrase recognition. Integrase recognized target DNA asymmetrically: the target DNA upstream of the viral DNA joining site played a much more important role than the downstream target DNA in protein-DNA interaction. The site of transesterification was determined by both the DNA sequence of the viral DNA end and the structure of the branched substrate. Using a series of disintegration substrates with various base modifications, we found that integrase had relaxed structural specificity for the hydroxyl group used in transesterification and could tolerate distortion of the double-helical structure of these DNA substrates.  相似文献   

9.
Retroviral integration in vivo is mediated by preintegration complexes (PICs) derived from infectious virions. In addition to the integrase enzyme and cDNA substrate, PICs contain a variety of viral and host cell proteins. Whereas two different cell proteins, high-mobility group protein A1 (HMGA1) and the barrier-to-autointegration factor (BAF), were identified as integration cofactors based on activities in in vitro PIC assays, only HMGA1 was previously identified as a PIC component. By using antibodies against known viral and cellular PIC components, we demonstrate here functional coimmunoprecipitation of endogenous BAF protein with human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) PICs. Since integrase protein and integration activity were also coimmunoprecipitated by anti-BAF antibodies, we conclude that BAF is a component of HIV-1 PICs. These data are consistent with the model that BAF functions as an integration cofactor in vivo.  相似文献   

10.
HIV-1 integrase (HIV-IN) is a well-validated antiviral drug target catalyzing a multistep reaction to incorporate the HIV-1 provirus into the genome of the host cell. Small molecule inhibitors of HIV-1 integrase that specifically target the strand transfer step have demonstrated efficacy in the suppression of virus propagation. However, only few specific strand transfer inhibitors have been identified to date, and the need to screen for novel compound scaffolds persists. Here, the authors describe 2 homogeneous time-resolved fluorescent resonance energy transfer-based assays for the measurement of HIV-1 integrase 3'-processing and strand transfer activities. Both assays were optimized for high-throughput screening formats, and a diverse library containing more than 1 million compounds was screened in 1536-well plates for HIV-IN strand transfer inhibitors. As a result, compounds were found that selectively affect the enzymatic strand transfer reaction over 3beta processing. Moreover, several bioactive molecules were identified that inhibited HIV-1 reporter virus infection in cellular model systems. In conclusion, the assays presented herein have proven their utility for the identification of mechanistically interesting and biologically active inhibitors of HIV-1 integrase that hold potential for further development into potent antiviral drugs.  相似文献   

11.
Integrase is the only viral protein necessary for integration of retroviral DNA into chromosomal DNA of the host cell. Biochemical analysis of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) integrase with purified protein and synthetic DNA substrates has revealed extensive information regarding the mechanism of action of the enzyme, as well as identification of critical residues and functional domains. Since in vitro reactions are carried out in the absence of other viral proteins and they analyze strand transfer of only one end of the donor substrate, they do not define completely the process of integration as it occurs during the course of viral infection. In an effort to further understand the role of integrase during viral infection, we initially constructed a panel of 24 HIV-1 mutants with specific alanine substitutions throughout the integrase coding region and analyzed them in a human T-cell line infection. Of these mutant viruses, 12 were capable of sustained viral replication, 11 were replication defective, and 1 was temperature sensitive for viral growth. The replication defective viruses express and correctly process the integrase and Gag proteins. Using this panel of mutants and an additional set of 18 mutant viruses, we identified nine amino acids which, when replaced with alanine, destroy integrase activity. Although none of the replication-defective mutants are able to integrate into the host genome, a subset of them with alterations in the catalytic triad are capable of Tat-mediated transactivation of an indicator gene linked to the viral long terminal repeat promoter. We present evidence that integration of the HIV-1 provirus is essential not only for productive infection of T cells but also for virus passage in both cultured peripheral blood lymphocytes and macrophage cells.  相似文献   

12.
We have examined the activities of HIV-1 integrase on substrates containing mismatches, composed of deoxyuridine at different positions in either the processed or nonprocessed strand of viral DNA, within and near the conserved CA dinucleotide of the U5 end of the HIV-1 LTR. Substitution in the processed strand of either the C or A of the CA dinucleotide or of the G 5' to the CA reduced strand transfer six-, three- and seven-fold respectively. 3'-processing was also reduced by substitution at the GC but not at the A. Substitution in the nonprocessed strand of the G nucleotide at the processing site abolished strand transfer while substitution of the T had no effect. DNA binding of HIV-1 integrase was not affected by deoxyuridine substitutions. Deoxyuridine substitution outside the trinucleotide remained compatible with enzyme activity. Enzymatically generated abasic sites were created at each mismatch to determine the effect of a missing base on integrase activity. Consistent with the deoxyuridine mismatch observations, 3'-processing and strand transfer were abolished when the abasic site was substituted for either of the nucleotides of the GCA trinucleotide. Integrase was, however, able to tolerate mismatches within this trinucleotide during the disintegration reaction. Taken together, these results suggest that base-mismatched or base-deleted substrates, which can be created by the proofreading-deficient HIV-1 RT, can be tolerated by HIV-1 integrase when located outside of the GCA trinucleotide at the U5 end of the LTR.  相似文献   

13.
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 integrase is one of three viral enzymes, and it realizes a key process of the viral replication cycle, i.e. viral DNA integration into infected cell genome. Integrase recognizes nucleotide sequences located at the ends of the viral DNA U3 and U5 LTRs and catalyzes 3'-processing and strand transfer reactions. To study the interactions between integrase and viral DNA at present work, we used modified integrase substrates mimicking the terminal U5 LTR sequence and containing non-nucleoside insertions in one or/and both strands. It is shown that the substrate modifications have no influence on the integrase binding rate, while the heterocyclic bases removal in the 5th and 6th substrate positions and in the 3rd position of the substrate processed strand distinctly inhibits the integrase catalytic activity. This fact demonstrates these bases significance for the active enzyme/substrate complex formation. On the contrary, modification of the 3rd position within substrate non-processed strand stimulates 3'-processing. Since heterocyclic base elimination results in disruption of the DNA complementary and staking interactions, this result shows that DNA double helix destabilization close to the cleaved bond promotes the 3'-processing.  相似文献   

14.
Retroviral integrase catalyzes integration of double-stranded viral DNA into the host chromosome by a process that has become an attractive target for drug design. In the 3' processing reaction, two nucleotides are specifically cleaved from both 3' ends of viral DNA yielding a 5' phosphorylated dimer (pGT). The resulting recessed 3' hydroxy groups of adenosine provide the attachment sites to the host DNA in the strand transfer reaction. Here, we studied the effect of modified double-stranded oligonucleotides mimicking both the unprocessed (21-mer oligonucleotides) and 3' processed (19-mer oligonucleotides) U5 termini of proviral DNA on activities of HIV-1 integrase in vitro. The inhibitions of 3' processing and strand transfer reactions were studied using 21-mer oligonucleotides containing isopolar, nonisosteric, both conformationally flexible and restricted phosphonate internucleotide linkages between the conservative AG of the sequence CAGT, and using a 21-mer oligonucleotide containing 2'-fluoroarabinofuranosyladenine. All modified 21-mer oligonucleotides competitively inhibited both reactions mediated by HIV-1 integrase with nanomolar IC50 values. Our studies with 19-mer oligonucleotides showed that modifications of the 3' hydroxyl significantly reduced the strand transfer reaction. The inhibition of integrase with 19-mer oligonucleotides terminated by (S)-9-(3-hydroxy-2-phosphonomethoxypropyl)adenine, 9-(2-phosphonomethoxyethyl)adenine, and adenosine showed that proper orientation of the 3' OH group and the presence of the furanose ring of adenosine significantly influence the strand transfer reaction.  相似文献   

15.
The core domain of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) integrase (IN) contains a D,D(35)E motif, named for the phylogenetically conserved glutamic acid and aspartic acid residues and the invariant 35 amino acid spacing between the second and third acidic residues. Each acidic residue of the D,D(35)E motif is independently essential for the 3′-processing and strand transfer activities of purified HIV-1 IN protein. Using a replication-defective viral genome with a hygromycin selectable marker, we recently reported that a mutation at any of the three residues of the D,D(35)E motif produces a 103- to 104-fold reduction in infectious titer compared with virus encoding wild-type IN (A. D. Leavitt et al., J. Virol. 70:721–728. 1996). The infectious titer, as measured by the number of hygromycin-resistant colonies formed following infection of cells in culture, was less than a few hundred colonies per μg of p24. To understand the mechanism by which the mutant virions conferred hygromycin resistance, we characterized the integrated viral DNA in cells infected with virus encoding mutations at each of the three residues of the D,D(35)E motif. We found the integrated viral DNA to be colinear with the incoming viral genome. DNA sequencing of the junctions between integrated viral DNA and host DNA showed that (i) the characteristic 5-bp direct repeat of host DNA flanking the HIV-1 provirus was not maintained, (ii) integration often produced a deletion of host DNA, (iii) integration sometimes occurred without the viral DNA first undergoing 3′-processing, (iv) integration sites showed a strong bias for a G residue immediately adjacent to the conserved viral CA dinucleotide, and (v) mutations at each of the residues of the D,D(35)E motif produced essentially identical phenotypes. We conclude that mutations at any of the three acidic residues of the conserved D,D(35)E motif so severely impair IN activity that most, if not all, integration events by virus encoding such mutations are not IN mediated. IN-independent provirus formation may have implications for anti-IN therapeutic agents that target the IN active site.  相似文献   

16.
LEDGF/p75 is known to enhance the integrase strand transfer activity in vitro, but the underlying mechanism is unclear. Using an integrase assay with a chemiluminescent readout adapted to a 96-well plate format, the effect of LEDGF/p75 on both the 3'-processing and strand transfer steps was analyzed. Integrase inhibitors of the strand transfer reaction remained active in the presence of LEDGF/p75, but displayed 3- to 7-fold higher IC50 values. Our analyses indicate that, in the presence of 150 nM LEDGF/p75, active integrase/donor DNA complexes were increased by 5.3-fold during the 3'-processing step. In addition, these integrase/donor DNA complexes showed a 4.5-fold greater affinity for the target DNA during the subsequent strand transfer step. We also observed a 3.7-fold increase in the rate constant of catalysis of the strand transfer step when 150 nM LEDGF/p75 was present during the 3'-processing step. In contrast, when LEDGF/p75 was added at the beginning of the strand transfer step, no increase in either the concentration of active integrase/donor DNA complex or its rate constant of strand transfer catalysis was observed. This observation suggested that the integrase/donor DNA formed in the absence of LEDGF/p75 became refractory to the stimulatory effect of LEDGF/p75. Instead, this LEDGF/p75 added at the start of the strand transfer step was able to promote the formation of a new cohort of active integrase/donor DNA complexes which became functional with a delay of 45 min after LEDGF/p75 addition. We propose a model whereby LEDGF/p75 can only bind integrase before the latter binds donor DNA whereas donor DNA can engage either free or LEDGF/p75-bound integrase.  相似文献   

17.
Integrase is the key enzyme that mediates integration of retroviral DNA into cellular DNA which is essential for viral replication. Inhibitors of HIV‐1 that target integrase recognize the nucleoprotein complexes formed by integrase and viral DNA substrate (intasomes) rather than the free enzyme. Atomic resolution structures of HIV‐1 intasomes are therefore required to understand the mechanisms of inhibition and drug resistance. To date, prototype foamy virus (PFV) is the only retrovirus for which such structures have been determined. We show that PFV strand transfer complexes (STC) can be assembled on product DNA without going through the normal forward reaction pathway. The finding that a retroviral STC can be assembled in this way may provide a powerful tool to alleviate the obstacles that impede structural studies of nucleoprotein intermediates in HIV‐1 DNA integration.  相似文献   

18.
Encapsidation of host restriction factor APOBEC3G (A3G) into vif-deficient human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) blocks virus replication at least partly by C-to-U deamination of viral minus-strand DNA, resulting in G-to-A hypermutation. A3G may also inhibit HIV-1 replication by reducing viral DNA synthesis and inducing viral DNA degradation. To gain further insight into the mechanisms of viral inhibition, we examined the metabolism of A3G-exposed viral DNA. We observed that an overall 35-fold decrease in viral infectivity was accompanied by a five- to sevenfold reduction in viral DNA synthesis. Wild-type A3G induced an additional fivefold decrease in the amount of viral DNA that was integrated into the host cell genome and similarly reduced the efficiency with which HIV-1 preintegration complexes (PICs) integrated into a target DNA in vitro. The A3G C-terminal catalytic domain was required for both of these antiviral activities. Southern blotting analysis of PICs showed that A3G reduced the efficiency and specificity of primer tRNA processing and removal, resulting in viral DNA ends that are inefficient substrates for integration and plus-strand DNA transfer. However, the decrease in plus-strand DNA transfer did not account for all of the observed decrease in viral DNA synthesis associated with A3G. These novel observations suggest that HIV-1 cDNA produced in the presence of A3G exhibits defects in primer tRNA processing, plus-strand DNA transfer, and integration.  相似文献   

19.
The retroviral integrase catalyzes two successive chemical reactions essential for integration of the retroviral genome into a host chromosome: 3' end processing, in which a dinucleotide is cleaved from each 3' end of the viral DNA; and the integration reaction itself, in which the resulting recessed 3' ends of the viral DNA are joined to the host DNA. We have examined the stereospecificity of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 integrase for phosphorothioate substrates in these reactions and in a third reaction, disintegration, which is macroscopically the reverse of integration. Integrase preferentially catalyzed end processing and integration of a substrate with the (R(p))-phosphorothioate stereoisomer at the reaction center and disintegration of a substrate with an (S(p))-phosphorothiate at the reaction center. These results suggest a model for the architecture of the active site of integrase, and its interactions with key features of the viral and target DNA.  相似文献   

20.
We have established an assay for the function of preintegration complexes (PICs) of human immunodeficiency virus type 2 (HIV-2) to investigate the integration mechanism and to develop additional methods for screening candidate integration inhibitors. We partially purified HIV-2 PICs and found that they were competent to integrate viral cDNA into target DNA in vitro. Analysis of the structure of integration products on Southern blots revealed forms consistent with those expected for authentic integration products and circular forms containing one and two long terminal repeats. To determine whether in vitro products had the detailed structure expected of integration products formed in vivo, we recovered product molecules and analyzed junctions between viral DNA and target DNA. In the integration junctions of all nine molecules examined, we observed the 5-bp duplication of target sequence characteristic of integration in vivo. We investigated the possible role in integration of Vpx, a protein present in HIV-2 but not HIV-1 and known to be present in viral cores. Although association of Vpx with viral cDNA was detectable, our studies revealed no obvious role of Vpx in integration since the activities of PICs from Vpx- virions were indistinguishable from those of wild type. We have also investigated the use of HIV-2 PICs as tools to screen candidate HIV inhibitors. Assays with HIV-2 PICs, like assays with HIV-1 PICs, were less sensitive to many small molecule inhibitors than were reactions with purified integrase only. Comparing results of assays with PICs from HIV-1 and HIV-2 may be particularly useful, since inhibitors active against both may be more widely useful and less vulnerable to escape mutants.  相似文献   

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