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1.
The specific activity of the human immunodeficiency virus, type 1 (HIV-1), integrase on the viral long terminal repeat requires the binding of the enzyme to certain sequences located in the U3 and U5 regions at the ends of viral DNA, but the determinants of this specific DNA-protein recognition are not yet completely understood. We synthesized DNA duplexes mimicking the U5 region and containing either 2'-modified nucleosides or 1,3-propanediol insertions and studied their interactions with HIV-1 integrase, using Mn2+ or Mg2+ ions as integrase cofactors. These DNA modifications had no strong effect on integrase binding to the substrate analogs but significantly affected 3'-end processing rate. The effects of nucleoside modifications at positions 5, 6, and especially 3 strongly depended on the cationic cofactor used. These effects were much more pronounced in the presence of Mg2+ than in the presence of Mn2+. Modifications of base pairs 7-9 affected 3'-end processing equally in the presence of both ions. Adenine from the 3rd bp is thought to form at least two hydrogen bonds with integrase that are crucial for specific DNA recognition. The complementary base, thymine, is not important for integrase activity. For other positions, our results suggest that integrase recognizes a fine structure of the sugar-phosphate backbone rather than heterocyclic bases. Integrase interactions with the unprocessed strand at positions 5-8 are more important than interactions with the processed strand for specific substrate recognition. Based on our results, we suggest a model for integrase interaction with the U5 substrate.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
The viral protein HIV-1 integrase is required for insertion of the viral genome into human chromosomes and for viral replication. Integration proceeds in two consecutive integrase-mediated reactions: 3'-processing and strand transfer. To investigate the DNA minor groove interactions of integrase relative to known sites of integrase action, we synthesized oligodeoxynucleotides containing single covalent adducts of known absolute configuration derived from trans-opening of benzo-[a]pyrene 7,8-diol 9,10-epoxide by the exocyclic 2-amino group of deoxyguanosine at specific positions in a duplex sequence corresponding to the terminus of the viral U5 DNA. Because the orientations of the hydrocarbon in the minor groove are known from NMR solution structures of duplex oligonucleotides containing these deoxyguanosine adducts, a detailed analysis of the relationship between the position of minor groove ligands and integrase interactions is possible. Adducts placed in the DNA minor groove two or three nucleotides from the 3'-processing site inhibited both 3'-processing and strand transfer. Inosine substitution showed that the guanine 2-amino group is required for efficient 3'-processing at one of these positions and for efficient strand transfer at the other. Mapping of the integration sites on both strands of the DNA substrates indicated that the adducts both inhibit strand transfer specifically at the minor groove bound sites and enhance integration at sites up to six nucleotides away from the adducts. These experiments demonstrate the importance of position-specific minor groove contacts for both the integrase-mediated 3'-processing and strand transfer reactions.  相似文献   

4.
Wang T  Balakrishnan M  Jonsson CB 《Biochemistry》1999,38(12):3624-3632
The 3'-processing activities of HIV-1, HTLV-2, and M-MuLV integrases (INs) with their corresponding U5 end of the viral DNA molecule were examined to define functional group determinants of U5 terminus recognition and catalysis. Nucleotide analogues were incorporated into the U5 terminus to produce conservative modifications in the surface of the major and/or minor grooves to map the hydrogen-bonding contacts required for LTR-IN interaction. Specifically, the phylogenetically conserved CA (positions 4 and 3, respectively) and the 5'-proximal nucleotide (position 5) were replaced with base analogues in plus and/or minus strands. For each integrase, similar major and minor groove contacts were identified in the guanine and adenine of the conserved CA/GT. Overall, perturbances in the minor groove resulted in a greater decrease in 3'-processing activity than the major groove substitutions. Additionally for HIV-1 and HTLV-2 INs, we observed an increase in the 3'-processing activity with an O4-MeThy substitution at position 3 of the minus strand. O4-MeThy may act to destabilize Watson-Crick base pairing and in doing so provide these INs with a more favorable interaction with the adjacent scissile bond. At position 5, a substantial divergence among the three INs was noted in the functional groups required for 3'-processing activity, thereby supporting the role of this position in providing some level of substrate specificity.  相似文献   

5.
Integration is essential for retroviral replication and gene therapy using retroviral vectors. Human immunodeficiency virus, type 1 (HIV-1), integrase specifically recognizes the terminal sequences of each long terminal repeat (LTR) and cleaves the 3'-end terminal dinucleotide 5'-GT. The exposed 3'-hydroxyl is then positioned for nucleophilic attack and subsequent strand transfer into another DNA duplex (target or chromosomal DNA). We report that both the terminal cytosine at the protruding 5'-end of the long terminal repeats (5'-C) and the integrase residue Gln-148 are critical for strand transfer. Proximity of the 5'-C and Gln-148 was demonstrated by disulfide cross-linking. Cross-linking is inhibited by the inhibitor 5CITEP 1-(5-chloroindol-3-yl)-3-hydroxy-3-(2H-tetrazol-5-yl)-propenone. We propose that strand transfer requires a conformational change of the integrase-viral (donor) DNA complex with formation of an H-bond between the N-3 of the 5'-C and the amine group of Gln-148. These findings have implications for the molecular mechanisms coupling 3'-processing and strand transfer as well as for the molecular pharmacology of integrase inhibitors.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Retroviral integrase participates in two catalytic reactions, which require interactions with the two ends of the viral DNA in the 3'processing reaction, and with a targeted host DNA in the strand transfer reaction. The 3'-hydroxyl group of 2'-deoxyadenosine resulting from the specific removing of GT dinucleotide from the viral DNA in the processing reaction provides the attachment site for the host DNA in a transesterification reaction. We synthesized oligonucleotides (ONs) of various lengths that mimic the processed HIV-1 U5 terminus of the proviral long terminal repeat (LTR) and are ended by 2'-deoxyadenosine containing a 3'-O-phosphonomethyl group. The duplex stability of phosphonomethyl ONs was increased by covalent linkage of the modified strand with its complementary strand by a triethylene glycol loop (TEG). Modified ONs containing up to 10 bases inhibited in vitro the strand transfer reaction catalyzed by HIV-1 integrase at nanomolar concentrations.  相似文献   

8.
The gene encoding an integrase of Mason-Pfizer monkey virus (M-PMV) is located at the 3'-end of the pol open reading frame. The M-PMV integrase has not been previously isolated and characterized. We have now cloned, expressed, isolated, and characterized M-PMV integrase and compared its activities and primary structure with those of HIV-1 and other retroviral integrases. M-PMV integrase prefers untranslated 3'-region-derived long-terminal repeat sequences in both the 3'-processing and the strand transfer activity assays. While the 3'-processing reaction catalyzed by M-PMV integrase was significantly increased in the presence of Mn(2+) and Co(2+) and was readily detectable in the presence of Mg(2+) and Ni(2+) cations, the strand transfer activity was strictly dependent only on Mn(2+). M-PMV integrase displays more relaxed substrate specificity than HIV-1 integrase, catalyzing the cleavage and the strand transfer of M-PMV and HIV-1 long-terminal repeat-derived substrates with similar efficiency. The structure-based sequence alignment of M-PMV, HIV-1, SIV, and ASV integrases predicted critical amino acids and motifs of M-PMV integrase for metal binding, interaction with nucleic acids, dimerization, protein structure maintenance and function, as well as for binding of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 and Rous avian sarcoma virus integrase inhibitors 5-CI-TEP, DHPTPB and Y-3.  相似文献   

9.
Retroviral integrase participates in two catalytic reactions, which require interactions with the two ends of the viral DNA in the 3′processing reaction, and with a targeted host DNA in the strand transfer reaction. The 3′-hydroxyl group of 2′-deoxyadenosine resulting from the specific removing of GT dinucleotide from the viral DNA in the processing reaction provides the attachment site for the host DNA in a transesterification reaction. We synthesized oligonucleotides (ONs) of various lengths that mimic the processed HIV-1 U5 terminus of the proviral long terminal repeat (LTR) and are ended by 2′-deoxyadenosine containing a 3′-O-phosphonomethyl group. The duplex stability of phosphonomethyl ONs was increased by covalent linkage of the modified strand with its complementary strand by a triethylene glycol loop (TEG). Modified ONs containing up to 10 bases inhibited in vitro the strand transfer reaction catalyzed by HIV-1 integrase at nanomolar concentrations.  相似文献   

10.
Among all the HIV-1 integrase inhibitors, the beta-diketo acids (DKAs) represent a major lead in anti-HIV-1 integrase drug design. These derivatives inhibit the integration reaction in vitro with a strong specificity for the 3'-end joining step. They are also antiviral and inhibit integration in vivo. The aim of the present study has been to investigate the molecular interactions between DKAs and HIV-1 integrase. We have compared 5CITEP with one of the most potent DKAs reported by the Merck group (L-708,906) and found that 5CITEP inhibits 3'-processing at concentrations where L-708,906 is only active on strand transfer. We also report a novel bifunctional DKA derivative that inhibits 3'-processing even more effectively than 5CITEP. The interactions of these inhibitors with the viral DNA donor ends have been studied by performing experiments with oligonucleotides containing defined modifications. We propose that the bifunctional DKA derivative binds to both the acceptor and donor sites of HIV-1 integrase, whereas the monofunctional L-708,906 derivative binds selectively to the acceptor site.  相似文献   

11.
The disintegration activity of Moloney murine leukemia virus (M-MuLV) integrase (IN) was investigated through structural and sequence modifications of a Y substrate that resembles an integration intermediate. The Y substrates, constructed from individual oligonucleotides, contain a single viral long terminal repeat (LTR) joined to a nicked target DNA. Truncation of the double-stranded LTR sequences distal to the conserved 5'-CA-3' dinucleotide progressively diminished disintegration activity. M-MuLV IN was also able to catalyze disintegration of a heterologous double-stranded LTR sequence. Significantly, the activity of M-MuLV IN on single-stranded LTR Y substrates was more dependent on the sequence and length of the LTR strand than that reported for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) IN. Modifications introduced at the Y-substrate junction demonstrated that the 3'-hydroxyl group at the terminus of the target strand was necessary for efficient joining of the target DNA strands. The presence of a 2'-hydroxyl group at the 3' end of the target strand, as well as a single-nucleotide gap at the LTR-target junction, reduced disintegration activity. The absence of hydroxyl groups on the terminal nucleotide abolished joining of the target strands. The results presented here suggest that M-MuLV IN disintegration activity is dependent on substantially different LTR sequence requirements than those reported for HIV-1 IN and may be mediated primarily through a structural recognition event.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
Ability of the EcoRII restriction endonuclease to cleave 14-base-pair DNA duplexes with nucleotide substitutions in the recognition site CCA/TGG and in the adjacent base pair has been studied. Modifications leading to a local change in the substrate conformation (rU residue in and outside the recognition site, A.A- or A.C-pairs in the flanking sequence) reduce the rate of hydrolysis, the effect being maximal when the modified base pair is outside the recognition site. No digestion occurs when the internal dC-residue of the recognition site is 5-methylated in one or both strands. Replacement of dT residue in the EcoRII recognition site by dfl5U residue results in a dramatic inhibition of hydrolysis. Km and kcat for the cleavage of 14-base-pair DNA duplex have been determined. The cleavage rate of the dT-containing strand of the recognition site in 1.5 fold higher comparing with the dA-containing strand. The cleavage of both strands of the substrate by EcoRII endonuclease is confirmed to proceed in one enzyme-substrate complex.  相似文献   

14.
The long terminal repeats (LTRs) that flank the retroviral DNA genome play a distinct role in the integration process by acting as specific substrates for the integrase (IN). The role of LTR sequences in providing substrate recognition and specificity to integration reactions was investigated for INs from human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), Moloney murine leukemia virus (M-MuLV), human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1), and human T-cell leukemia virus type 2 (HTLV-2). Overall, these INs required specific LTR sequences for optimal catalysis of 3'-processing reactions, as opposed to strand transfer and disintegration reactions. It is of particular note that in strand transfer reactions the sites of integration were similar among the four INs. In the 3'-processing reaction, sequence specificity for each IN was traced to the three nucleotides proximal to the conserved CA. Reactions catalyzed by M-MuLV IN were additionally influenced by upstream regions. The nucleotide requirements for optimal catalysis differed for each IN. HIV-1 IN showed a broad range of substrate specificities, while HTLV-1 IN and HTLV-2 IN had more defined sequence requirements. M-MuLV IN exhibited greater activity with the heterologous LTR substrates than with its own wild-type substrate. This finding was further substantiated by the high levels of activity catalyzed by the IN on modified M-MuLV LTRs. This work suggests that unlike the other INs examined, M-MuLV IN has evolved with an IN-LTR interaction that is suboptimal.  相似文献   

15.
We report the activities of HIV integrase protein on a novel DNA substrate, consisting of a pair of gapped duplex molecules. Integrase catalyzed an intermolecular disintegration reaction that requires positioning of a pair of the gapped duplexes in a configuration that resembles the intgration intermediate. However, the major reaction resulted from an intramolecular reaction involving a single gapped duplex, giving rise to a hairpin. Surprisingly, a deletion mutant of integrase that lacks both the amino and carboxyl terminal regions still catalyzed the intermolecular disintegration reaction, but supported only a very low level of the intramolecular reaction. The central core region of integrase is therefore sufficient to both bind the gapped duplex DNA and juxtapose a pair of such molecules through protein-protein interactions. We suggest that the branched DNA structures of the previously reported disintegration substrate, and the intermolecular disintegration substrate described here, assist in stabilizing protein-protein interactions that otherwise require the amino and carboxy terminal regions of integrase.  相似文献   

16.
A Mazumder  M Gupta    Y Pommier 《Nucleic acids research》1994,22(21):4441-4448
We present evidence suggesting that the 3'-processing activity of HIV-1 integrase is dramatically affected by electrostatic and/or steric perturbations 3' to the conserved CA dinucleotide. When the phosphodiester bond 3' to the scissile phosphodiester is replaced by a methylphosphonodiester linkage, 3'-processing decreases by two orders of magnitude. This block of cleavage can be somewhat overcome by increasing the pH of the reaction. Labeling of the substrates at the 3'-end revealed blockage of water and glycerol, but stimulation of the viral DNA 3'-hydroxyl, acting as the nucleophile with the methylphosphonodiester substrate. Interestingly, a circular trinucleotide was formed using the phosphodiester and methylphosphonodiester substrates when the terminal nucleotide was 3'-deoxyadenosine but not 2'-deoxyadenosine. Mutagenesis of the enzyme active site has previously been shown to alter the choice of nucleophile in the 3'-processing reaction. Taken together, the results in this study suggest that 'mutagenesis' of the DNA backbone can also alter the choice of nucleophile.  相似文献   

17.
1-(4-(3-(Trifluoromethyl)-3H-diazirin-3-yl)benzamido)-3-O-(4,4"-dimethoxytrityl)-2,3-propanediol phosphoramidite was synthesized and used as a modified unit in the automatic synthesis of oligodeoxyribonucleotides. Pentadecathymidylates with various numbers of 2,3-propanediol moieties substituted with aryl(trifluoromethyl)diazirinyl (ATFMD) were obtained, and the thermal stability of their duplexes with (dA)15 were studied. One ATFMD-propanediol residue was shown to reduce the thermal stability of the duplex by 8–9°C. The irradiation of the ATFMD-containing duplexes by UV light with the wavelength of 350 nm was found to cause the cross-linking reaction of the ATFMD-containing strand with the complementary strand and the formation of the cross-linked duplexes. The photomodification efficiency was independent of the oligonucleotide sequence, with each ATFMD group providing for 5% cross-linking. The irradiation of an ATFMD-containing duplex, a substrate of the HIV-1 integrase, in the presence of this enzyme resulted in the covalent DNA–protein complex. The oligonucleotides with the 1-(4-(3-(trifluoromethyl)-3H-diazirin-3-yl)benzamido)-2,3-propanediol moiety in their chains can be used for the photoaffinity modification of both nucleic acids and proteins that recognize them.  相似文献   

18.
Retroviral integrase (IN) is responsible for two consecutive reactions, which lead to insertion of a viral DNA copy into a host cell chromosome. Initially, the enzyme removes di- or trinucleotides from viral DNA ends to expose 3'-hydroxyls attached to the invariant CA dinucleotides (3'-processing reaction). Second, it inserts the processed 3'-viral DNA ends into host chromosomal DNA (strand transfer). Herein, we report a crystal structure of prototype foamy virus IN bound to viral DNA prior to 3'-processing. Furthermore, taking advantage of its dependence on divalent metal ion cofactors, we were able to freeze trap the viral enzyme in its ground states containing all the components necessary for 3'-processing or strand transfer. Our results shed light on the mechanics of retroviral DNA integration and explain why HIV IN strand transfer inhibitors are ineffective against the 3'-processing step of integration. The ground state structures moreover highlight a striking substrate mimicry utilized by the inhibitors in their binding to the IN active site and suggest ways to improve upon this clinically relevant class of small molecules.  相似文献   

19.
Al-Mawsawi LQ  Sechi M  Neamati N 《FEBS letters》2007,581(6):1151-1156
HIV-1 integrase (IN) mediates the insertion of viral cDNA into the cell genome, a vital process for replication. This step is catalyzed by two separate DNA reaction events, termed 3'-processing and strand transfer. Here, we show that six inhibitors from five structurally different classes of compounds display a selectivity shift towards preferential strand transfer inhibition over the 3'-processing activity of IN when a single serine is substituted at position C130. Even though IN utilizes the same active site for both reactions, this finding suggests a distinct conformational dissimilarity in the mechanistic details of each IN catalytic event.  相似文献   

20.
Integration of the viral cDNA into host chromosomes is required for viral replication. Human immunodeficiency virus integrase catalyzes two sequential reactions, 3'-processing (3'-P) and strand transfer (ST). The first integrase inhibitors are undergoing clinical trial, but interactions of inhibitors with integrase and DNA are not well understood in the absence of a co-crystal structure. To increase our understanding of integrase interactions with DNA, we examined integrase catalysis with oligonucleotides containing DNA backbone, base, and groove modifications placed at unique positions surrounding the 3'-processing site. 3'-Processing was blocked with substrates containing constrained sugars and alpha-anomeric residues, suggesting that integrase requires flexibility of the phosphodiester backbone at the 3'-P site. Of several benzo[a]pyrene 7,8-diol 9,10-epoxide (BaP DE) adducts tested, only the adduct in the minor groove at the 3'-P site inhibited 3'-P, suggesting the importance of the minor groove contacts for 3'-P. ST occurred in the presence of bulky BaP DE DNA adducts attached to the end of the viral DNA suggesting opening of the active site for ST. Position-specific effects of these BaP DE DNA adducts were found for inhibition of integrase by diketo acids. Together, these results demonstrate the importance of DNA structure and specific contacts with the viral DNA processing site for inhibition by integrase inhibitors.  相似文献   

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