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1.
K Monde R Contreras-Galindo MH Kaplan DM Markovitz A Ono 《Journal of virology》2012,86(20):11194-11208
Human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs), which are remnants of ancestral retroviruses integrated into the human genome, are defective in viral replication. Because activation of HERV-K and coexpression of this virus with HIV-1 have been observed during HIV-1 infection, it is conceivable that HERV-K could affect HIV-1 replication, either by competition or by cooperation, in cells expressing both viruses. In this study, we found that the release efficiency of HIV-1 Gag was 3-fold reduced upon overexpression of HERV-K(CON) Gag. In addition, we observed that in cells expressing Gag proteins of both viruses, HERV-K(CON) Gag colocalized with HIV-1 Gag at the plasma membrane. Furthermore, HERV-K(CON) Gag was found to coassemble with HIV-1 Gag, as demonstrated by (i) processing of HERV-K(CON) Gag by HIV-1 protease in virions, (ii) coimmunoprecipitation of virion-associated HERV-K(CON) Gag with HIV-1 Gag, and (iii) rescue of a late-domain-defective HERV-K(CON) Gag by wild-type (WT) HIV-1 Gag. Myristylation-deficient HERV-K(CON) Gag localized to nuclei, suggesting cryptic nuclear trafficking of HERV-K Gag. Notably, unlike WT HERV-K(CON) Gag, HIV-1 Gag failed to rescue myristylation-deficient HERV-K(CON) Gag to the plasma membrane. Efficient colocalization and coassembly of HIV-1 Gag and HERV-K Gag also required nucleocapsid (NC). These results provide evidence that HIV-1 Gag heteromultimerizes with HERV-K Gag at the plasma membrane, presumably through NC-RNA interaction. Intriguingly, HERV-K Gag overexpression reduced not only HIV-1 release efficiency but also HIV-1 infectivity in a myristylation- and NC-dependent manner. Altogether, these results indicate that Gag proteins of endogenous retroviruses can coassemble with HIV-1 Gag and modulate the late phase of HIV-1 replication. 相似文献
2.
Particle Size Determinants in the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Gag Protein 总被引:3,自引:2,他引:3
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Laurence Garnier Lee Ratner Benjamin Rovinski Shi-Xian Cao John W. Wills 《Journal of virology》1998,72(6):4667-4677
The retroviral Gag protein plays the central role in the assembly process and can form membrane-enclosed, virus-like particles in the absence of any other viral products. These particles are similar to authentic virions in density and size. Three small domains of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Gag protein have been previously identified as being important for budding. Regions that lie outside these domains can be deleted without any effect on particle release or density. However, the regions of Gag that control the size of HIV-1 particles are less well understood. In the case of Rous sarcoma virus (RSV), the size determinant maps to the CA (capsid) and adjacent spacer sequences within Gag, but systematic mapping of the HIV Gag protein has not been reported. To locate the size determinants of HIV-1, we analyzed a large collection of Gag mutants. To our surprise, all mutants with defects in the MA (matrix), CA, and the N-terminal part of NC (nucleocapsid) sequences produced dense particles of normal size, suggesting that oncoviruses (RSV) and lentiviruses (HIV-1) have different size-controlling elements. The most important region found to be critical for determining HIV-1 particle size is the p6 sequence. Particles lacking all or small parts of p6 were uniform in size distribution but very large as measured by rate zonal gradients. Further evidence for this novel function of p6 was obtained by placing this sequence at the C terminus of RSV CA mutants that produce heterogeneously sized particles. We found that the RSV-p6 chimeras produced normally sized particles. Thus, we present evidence that the entire p6 sequence plays a role in determining the size of a retroviral particle. 相似文献
3.
Analysis of the Assembly Function of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Gag Protein Nucleocapsid Domain
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Previous studies have shown that in addition to its function in specific RNA encapsidation, the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) nucleocapsid (NC) is required for efficient virus particle assembly. However, the mechanism by which NC facilitates the assembly process is not clearly established. Formally, NC could act by constraining the Pr55gag polyprotein into an assembly-competent conformation or by masking residues which block the assembly process. Alternatively, the capacity of NC to bind RNA or make interprotein contacts might affect particle assembly. To examine its role in the assembly process, we replaced the NC domain in Pr55gag with polypeptide domains of known function, and the chimeric proteins were analyzed for their abilities to direct the release of virus-like particles. Our results indicate that NC does not mask inhibitory domains and does not act passively, by simply providing a stable folded monomeric structure. However, replacement of NC by polypeptides which form interprotein contacts permitted efficient virus particle assembly and release, even when RNA was not detected in the particles. These results suggest that formation of interprotein contacts by NC is essential to the normal HIV-1 assembly process.Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) encodes three major genes, gag, pol, and env, which are commonly found in all mammalian retroviruses. It also encodes accessory genes whose protein products are important for regulation of its life cycle (6, 30, 35). However, of all the genes encoded by HIV-1, only the protein product of the gag gene has been found to be necessary and sufficient for the assembly of virus-like particles (11, 13, 17, 22, 32, 33). The HIV-1 Gag protein initially is expressed as a 55-kDa polyprotein precursor (Pr55gag), but during or shortly after particle release, Pr55gag ordinarily is cleaved by the viral protease (PR). The products of the protease action are the four major viral proteins matrix (MA), capsid (CA), nucleocapsid (NC), and p6, and the two spacer polypeptides p2 and p1, which represent sequences between CA and NC and between NC and p6, respectively (15, 19, 23, 30).The HIV-1 nucleocapsid proteins have two Cys-X2-Cys-X4-His-X4-Cys (Cys-His) motifs, reminiscent of the zinc finger motifs found in many DNA binding proteins, and NC has been shown to facilitate the specific encapsidation of HIV-1 genomic RNAs. In addition to its encapsidation function, NC influences virus particle assembly (7, 10, 17, 21, 40). In particular, Gag proteins lacking the NC domain fail to assemble virus particles efficiently. Nevertheless, some chimeric Gag proteins which carry foreign sequences in place of NC have been shown to assemble and release virus particles at wild-type (wt) levels (2, 37, 40). Thus, it appears that in some circumstances, the role that NC plays in virus particle assembly can be replaced. To date, it is not clear how NC affects particle assembly, although several possibilities might be envisioned. One possibility is that deletion of NC unmasks inhibitory sequences in p2 or the C terminus of CA. Alternatively, NC may simply provide a stable monomeric folded structure which locks CA or other Gag domains into an assembly-competent conformation. Another possibility is that NC facilitates assembly by forming essential protein-protein contacts between neighbor Prgag molecules, as suggested in cross-linking studies (21). Finally, the assembly role of NC may stem from its RNA binding capabilities, a hypothesis supported by studies of Campbell and Vogt (5), which have shown that RNA facilitates the in vitro assembly of retroviral Gag proteins into higher-order structures.To distinguish among possible mechanisms by which NC facilitates HIV-1 assembly, we replaced NC with polypeptides having known structural characteristics and examined particle assembly directed by these chimeric proteins. Using this approach, we have found that NC does not play a passive role in HIV-1 assembly as either a mask to assembly inhibitor domains or a nonspecific, stably folded structure. Rather, sequences known to form strong interprotein contacts were observed to enhance assembly, suggesting a similar role for the NC domain itself. With several assembly-competent chimeric proteins, we detected no particle-associated RNAs. These results suggest that while RNA may be essential to virus assembly in the context of the wt Pr55gag protein, it is dispensable for formation of virus-like particles from chimeric proteins. 相似文献
4.
Amino Acid Covariation in a Functionally Important Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Protein Region Is Associated With Population Subdivision
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Jack da Silva 《Genetics》2009,182(1):265-275
The frequently reported amino acid covariation of the highly polymorphic human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) exterior envelope glycoprotein V3 region has been assumed to reflect fitness epistasis between residues. However, nonrandom association of amino acids, or linkage disequilibrium, has many possible causes, including population subdivision. If the amino acids at a set of sequence sites differ in frequencies between subpopulations, then analysis of the whole population may reveal linkage disequilibrium even if it does not exist in any subpopulation. HIV-1 has a complex population structure, and the effects of this structure on linkage disequilibrium were investigated by estimating within- and among-subpopulation components of variance in linkage disequilibrium. The amino acid covariation previously reported is explained by differences in amino acid frequencies among virus subpopulations in different patients and by nonsystematic disequilibrium among patients. Disequilibrium within patients appears to be entirely due to differences in amino acid frequencies among sampling time points and among chemokine coreceptor usage phenotypes of virus particles, but not source tissues. Positive selection explains differences in allele frequencies among time points and phenotypes, indicating that these differences are adaptive rather than due to genetic drift. However, the absence of a correlation between linkage disequilibrium and phenotype suggests that fitness epistasis is an unlikely cause of disequilibrium. Indeed, when population structure is removed by analyzing sequences from a single time point and phenotype, no disequilibrium is detectable within patients. These results caution against interpreting amino acid covariation and coevolution as evidence for fitness epistasis. 相似文献
5.
Mutational Analysis of the Hydrophobic Tail of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 p6Gag Protein Produces a Mutant That Fails To Package Its Envelope Protein
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David E. Ott Elena N. Chertova Laura K. Busch Lori V. Coren Tracy D. Gagliardi Donald G. Johnson 《Journal of virology》1999,73(1):19-28
The p6Gag protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) is produced as the carboxyl-terminal sequence within the Gag polyprotein. The amino acid composition of this protein is high in hydrophilic and polar residues except for a patch of relatively hydrophobic amino acids found in the carboxyl-terminal 16 amino acids. Internal cleavage of p6Gag between Y36 and P37, apparently by the HIV-1 protease, removes this hydrophobic tail region from approximately 30% of the mature p6Gag proteins in HIV-1MN. To investigate the importance of this cleavage and the hydrophobic nature of this portion of p6Gag, site-directed mutations were made at the minor protease cleavage site and within the hydrophobic tail. The results showed that all of the single-amino-acid-replacement mutants exhibited either reduced or undetectable cleavage at the site yet almost all were nearly as infectious as wild-type virus, demonstrating that processing at this site is not important for viral replication. However, one exception, Y36F, was 300-fold as infectious the wild type. In contrast to the single-substitution mutants, a virus with two substitutions in this region of p6Gag, Y36S-L41P, could not infect susceptible cells. Protein analysis showed that while the processing of the Gag precursor was normal, the double mutant did not incorporate Env into virus particles. This mutant could be complemented with surface glycoproteins from vesicular stomatitis virus and murine leukemia virus, showing that the inability to incorporate Env was the lethal defect for the Y36S-L41P virus. However, this mutant was not rescued by an HIV-1 Env with a truncated gp41TM cytoplasmic domain, showing that it is phenotypically different from the previously described MA mutants that do not incorporate their full-length Env proteins. Cotransfection experiments with Y36S-L41P and wild-type proviral DNAs revealed that the mutant Gag dominantly blocked the incorporation of Env by wild-type Gag. These results show that the Y36S-L41P p6Gag mutation dramatically blocks the incorporation of HIV-1 Env, presumably acting late in assembly and early during budding. 相似文献
6.
Identification of Biased Amino Acid Substitution Patterns in Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Isolates from Patients Treated with Protease Inhibitors
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Robert W. Shafer Phillip Hsu Amy K. Patick Charles Craig Volker Brendel 《Journal of virology》1999,73(7):6197-6202
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) amino acid substitutions observed during antiretroviral drug therapy may be caused by drug selection, non-drug-related evolution, or sampling error introduced by the sequencing process. We analyzed HIV-1 sequences from 371 untreated patients and from 178 patients receiving a single protease inhibitor. Amino acid substitution patterns during treatment were compared with inferred substitution patterns arising evolutionarily without treatment. Our results suggest that most treatment-associated amino acid substitutions are caused by selective drug pressure, including substitutions not previously associated with drug resistance. 相似文献
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In Vitro Assembly Properties of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Gag Protein Lacking the p6 Domain 总被引:4,自引:17,他引:4
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Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) normally assembles into particles of 100 to 120 nm in diameter by budding through the plasma membrane of the cell. The Gag polyprotein is the only viral protein that is required for the formation of these particles. We have used an in vitro assembly system to examine the assembly properties of purified, recombinant HIV-1 Gag protein and of Gag missing the C-terminal p6 domain (Gag Δp6). This system was used previously to show that the CA-NC fragment of HIV-1 Gag assembled into cylindrical particles. We now report that both HIV-1 Gag and Gag Δp6 assemble into small, 25- to 30-nm-diameter spherical particles in vitro. The multimerization of Gag Δp6 into units larger than dimers and the formation of spherical particles required nucleic acid. Removal of the nucleic acid with NaCl or nucleases resulted in the disruption of the multimerized complexes. We conclude from these results that (i) N-terminal extension of HIV-1 CA-NC to include the MA domain results in the formation of spherical, rather than cylindrical, particles; (ii) nucleic acid is required for the assembly and maintenance of HIV-1 Gag Δp6 virus-like particles in vitro and possibly in vivo; (iii) a wide variety of RNAs or even short DNA oligonucleotides will support assembly; (iv) protein-protein interactions within the particle must be relatively weak; and (v) recombinant HIV-1 Gag Δp6 and nucleic acid are not sufficient for the formation of normal-sized particles. 相似文献
9.
Loss of Polyoma Virus Infectivity as a Result of a Single Amino Acid Change in a Region of Polyoma Virus Large T-Antigen Which Has Extensive Amino Acid Homology with Simian Virus 40 Large T-Antigen 总被引:3,自引:6,他引:3
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The polyoma virus (Py) transformed cell line 7axB, selected by in vivo passage of an in vitro transformed cell, contains an integrated tandem array of 2.4 genomes and produces the large, middle, and small Py T-antigen species, with molecular weights of 100,000, 55,000, and 22,000, respectively (Hayday et al., J. Virol. 44:67-77, 1982; Lania et al., Cold Spring Harbor Symp. Quant. Biol. 44:597-603, 1980). The integrated viral and adjacent host DNA sequences have been molecularly cloned as three EcoRI fragments (Hayday et al.). One of these fragments (7B-M), derived from within the tandem viral sequences, is equivalent to an EcoRI viral linear molecule. Fragment 7B-M has been found to be transformation competent but incapable of producing infectious virus after DNA transfection (Hayday et al.). By constructing chimerae between 7B-M and Py DNA and by direct DNA sequencing, the mutation responsible for the loss of infectivity has been located to a single base change (adenine to guanine) at nucleotide 2503. This results in a conversion of an aspartic acid to a glycine in the C-terminal region of the Py large T-antigen but does not appear to affect the binding of the Py large T-antigen to Py DNA at the putative DNA replication and autoregulation binding sites. The mutation is located within a 21-amino acid homology region shared by the simian virus 40 large T-antigen (Friedmann et al., Cell 17:715-724, 1979). These results suggest that the mutation in the 7axB large T-antigen may be involved in the active site of the protein for DNA replication. 相似文献
10.
Ubiquitin Is Covalently Attached to the p6Gag Proteins of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 and Simian Immunodeficiency Virus and to the p12Gag Protein of Moloney Murine Leukemia Virus 总被引:1,自引:8,他引:1
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David E. Ott Lori V. Coren Terry D. Copeland Bradley P. Kane Donald G. Johnson Raymond C. Sowder II Yoshiyuki Yoshinaka Stephen Oroszlan Larry O. Arthur Louis E. Henderson 《Journal of virology》1998,72(4):2962-2968
Host proteins are incorporated into retroviral virions during assembly and budding. We have examined three retroviruses, human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV), and Moloney murine leukemia virus (Mo-MuLV), for the presence of ubiquitin inside each of these virions. After a protease treatment to remove exterior viral as well as contaminating cellular proteins, the proteins remaining inside the virion were analyzed. The results presented here show that all three virions incorporate ubiquitin molecules at approximately 10% of the level of Gag found in virions. In addition to free ubiquitin, covalent ubiquitin-Gag complexes were detected, isolated, and characterized from all three viruses. Our immunoblot and protein sequencing results on treated virions showed that approximately 2% of either HIV-1 or SIV p6Gag was covalently attached to a single ubiquitin molecule inside the respective virions and that approximately 2 to 5% of the p12Gag in Mo-MuLV virions was monoubiquitinated. These results show that ubiquitination of Gag is conserved among these retroviruses and occurs in the p6Gag portion of the Gag polyprotein, a region that is likely to be involved in assembly and budding. 相似文献
11.
Cleavage of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Proteinase from the N-Terminally Adjacent p6* Protein Is Essential for Efficient Gag Polyprotein Processing and Viral Infectivity 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
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Maturation of infectious human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) particles requires proteolytic cleavage of the structural polyproteins by the viral proteinase (PR), which is itself encoded as part of the Gag-Pol polyprotein. Expression of truncated PR-containing sequences in heterologous systems has mostly led to the autocatalytic release of an 11-kDa species of PR which is capable of processing all known cleavage sites on the viral precursor proteins. Relatively little is known about cleavages within the nascent virus particle, on the other hand, and controversial results concerning the active PR species inside the virion and the relative activities of extended PR species have been reported. Here, we report that HIV type 1 (HIV-1) particles of four different strains obtained from different cell lines contain an 11-kDa PR, with no extended PR proteins detectable. Furthermore, mutation of the N-terminal PR cleavage site leading to production of an N-terminally extended 17-kDa PR species caused a severe defect in Gag polyprotein processing and a complete loss of viral infectivity. We conclude that N-terminal release of PR from the HIV-1 polyprotein is essential for viral replication and suggest that extended versions of PR may have a transient function in the proteolytic cascade. 相似文献
12.
Miguel A. Martín-Acebes Ana-Belén Blázquez Nereida Jiménez de Oya Estela Escribano-Romero Pei-Yong Shi Juan-Carlos Saiz 《PloS one》2013,8(7)
West Nile virus (WNV) is a worldwide distributed mosquito-borne flavivirus that naturally cycles between birds and mosquitoes, although it can infect multiple vertebrate hosts including horses and humans. This virus is responsible for recurrent epidemics of febrile illness and encephalitis, and has recently become a global concern. WNV requires to transit through intracellular acidic compartments at two different steps to complete its infectious cycle. These include fusion between the viral envelope and the membrane of endosomes during viral entry, and virus maturation in the trans-Golgi network. In this study, we followed a genetic approach to study the connections between viral components and acidic pH. A WNV mutant with increased resistance to the acidotropic compound NH4Cl, which blocks organelle acidification and inhibits WNV infection, was selected. Nucleotide sequencing revealed that this mutant displayed a single amino acid substitution (Lys 3 to Glu) on the highly basic internal capsid or core (C) protein. The functional role of this replacement was confirmed by its introduction into a WNV infectious clone. This single amino acid substitution also increased resistance to other acidification inhibitor (concanamycin A) and induced a reduction of the neurovirulence in mice. Interestingly, a naturally occurring accompanying mutation found on prM protein abolished the resistant phenotype, supporting the idea of a genetic crosstalk between the internal C protein and the external glycoproteins of the virion. The findings here reported unveil a non-previously assessed connection between the C viral protein and the acidic pH necessary for entry and proper exit of flaviviruses. 相似文献
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14.
Functional Interaction of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Vpu and Gag with a Novel Member of the Tetratricopeptide Repeat Protein Family 总被引:4,自引:1,他引:4
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Michael A. Callahan Mark A. Handley Yung-Hui Lee Katrin J. Talbot J. Wade Harper Antonito T. Panganiban 《Journal of virology》1998,72(6):5189-5197
Viral protein U (Vpu) is a protein encoded by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) that promotes the degradation of the virus receptor, CD4, and enhances the release of virus particles from cells. We isolated a cDNA that encodes a novel cellular protein that interacts with Vpu in vitro, in vivo, and in yeast cells. This Vpu-binding protein (UBP) has a molecular mass of 41 kDa and is expressed ubiquitously in human tissues at the RNA level. UBP is a novel member of the tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR) protein family containing four copies of the 34-amino-acid TPR motif. Other proteins that contain TPR motifs include members of the immunophilin superfamily, organelle-targeting proteins, and a protein phosphatase. UBP also interacts directly with HIV-1 Gag protein, the principal structural component of the viral capsid. However, when Vpu and Gag are coexpressed, stable interaction between UBP and Gag is diminished. Furthermore, overexpression of UBP in virus-producing cells resulted in a significant reduction in HIV-1 virion release. Taken together, these data indicate that UBP plays a role in Vpu-mediated enhancement of particle release. 相似文献
15.
Detection of a Trimeric Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Gag Intermediate Is Dependent on Sequences in the Matrix Protein, p17 总被引:4,自引:4,他引:4
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Yuko Morikawa Wei-Hong Zhang David J. Hockley Milan V. Nermut Ian M. Jones 《Journal of virology》1998,72(9):7659-7663
Previous studies have shown that single amino acid changes in the amino-terminal matrix (MA) domain, p17, of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 Gag precursor Pr55, can abrogate virion particle assembly. In the three-dimensional structure of MA such mutations lie in a single helix spanning residues 54 to 68, suggesting a key role for this helix in the assembly process. The fundamental nature of this involvement, however, remains poorly understood. In the present study, the essential features of the MA helix required for virus assembly have been investigated through the analysis of a further 15 site-directed mutants. With previous mutants that failed to assemble, residues mapped as critical for assembly were all located on the hydrophobic face of the helix and had a key role in stabilizing the trimeric interface. This implies a role for the MA trimer in virus assembly. We support this interpretation by showing that purified MA is trimeric in solution and that mutations that prevent virus assembly also prevent trimerization. Trimerization in solution was also a property of a larger MA-capsid (CA) Gag molecule, while under the same conditions CA only was a monomer. These data suggest that Gag trimerization driven by the MA domain is an intermediate stage in normal virion assembly and that it relies, in turn, on an MA conformation dependent on the hydrophobic core of the molecule. 相似文献
16.
Binding of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Gag Protein to the Viral RNA Encapsidation Signal in the Yeast Three-Hybrid System
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We have used the yeast three-hybrid system (D. J. SenGupta, B. Zhang, B. Kraemer, P. Pochart, S. Fields, and M. Wickens, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 93:8496–8501, 1996) to study binding of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Gag protein to the HIV-1 RNA encapsidation signal (HIVΨ). Interaction of these elements results in the activation of a reporter gene in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Using this system, we have shown that the HIV-1 Gag protein binds specifically to a 139-nucleotide fragment of the HIVΨ signal containing four stem-loop structures. Mutations in either the Gag protein or the encapsidation signal that have been shown previously to impair this interaction reduced the activation of the reporter gene. Interestingly, the nucleocapsid portion of Gag retained the RNA binding activity but lost its specificity compared to the full-length Gag. These results demonstrate the utility of this system and suggest that a variety of genetic analyses could be performed to study Gag-encapsidation signal interactions. 相似文献
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18.
Yan Li Dan Yang Jia-Ye Wang Yuan Yao Wei-Zhe Zhang Lu-Jing Wang De-Chun Cheng Feng-Kun Yang Feng-Min Zhang Min Zhuang Hong Ling 《PloS one》2014,9(1)
The importance of the fourth variable (V4) region of the human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) envelope glycoprotein (Env) in virus infection has not been well clarified, though the polymorphism of this region has been found to be associated with disease progression to acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). In the present work, we focused on the correlation between HIV-1 gp120 V4 region polymorphism and the function of the region on virus entry, and the possible mechanisms for how the V4 region contributes to virus infectivity. Therefore, we analyzed the differences in V4 sequences along with coreceptor usage preference from CCR5 to CXCR4 and examined the importance of the amino acids within the V4 region for CCR5- and CXCR4-tropic virus entry. In addition, we determined the influence of the V4 amino acids on Env expression and gp160 processing intracellularly, as well as the amount of Env on the pseudovirus surface. The results indicated that V4 tended to have a shorter length, fewer potential N-linked glycosylation sites (PNGS), greater evolutionary distance, and a lower negative net charge when HIV-1 isolates switched from a coreceptor usage preference for CCR5 to CXCR4. The N- and C-terminals of the HIV-1 V4 region are highly conserved and critical to maintain virus entry ability, but only the mutation at position 417 in the context of ADA (a R5-tropic HIV-1 strain) resulted in the ability to utilize CXCR4. In addition, 390L, 391F, 414I, and 416L are critical to maintain gp160 processing and maturation. It is likely that the hydrophobic properties and the electrostatic surface potential of gp120, rather than the conformational structure, greatly contribute to this V4 functionality. The findings provide information to aid in the understanding of the functions of V4 in HIV-1 entry and offer a potential target to aid in the development of entry inhibitors. 相似文献
19.
Use of Patient-Derived Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Integrases To Identify a Protein Residue That Affects Target Site Selection
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Amy L. Harper Lynn M. Skinner Malgorzata Sudol Michael Katzman 《Journal of virology》2001,75(16):7756-7762
To identify parts of retroviral integrase that interact with cellular DNA, we tested patient-derived human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) integrases for alterations in the choice of nonviral target DNA sites. This strategy took advantage of the genetic diversity of HIV-1, which provided 75 integrase variants that differed by a small number of amino acids. Moreover, our hypothesis that biological pressures on the choice of nonviral sites would be minimal was validated when most of the proteins that catalyzed DNA joining exhibited altered target site preferences. Comparison of the sequences of proteins with the same preferences then guided mutagenesis of a laboratory integrase. The results showed that single amino acid substitutions at one particular residue yielded the same target site patterns as naturally occurring integrases that included these substitutions. Similar results were found with DNA joining reactions conducted with Mn(2+) or with Mg(2+) and were confirmed with a nonspecific alcoholysis assay. Other amino acid changes at this position also affected target site preferences. Thus, this novel approach has identified a residue in the central domain of HIV-1 integrase that interacts with or influences interactions with cellular DNA. The data also support a model in which integrase has distinct sites for viral and cellular DNA. 相似文献
20.
Mutations within Four Distinct Gag Proteins Are Required To Restore Replication of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 after Deletion Mutagenesis within the Dimerization Initiation Site
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Chen Liang Liwei Rong Yudong Quan Michael Laughrea Lawrence Kleiman Mark A. Wainberg 《Journal of virology》1999,73(8):7014-7020
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) genomic RNA segments at nucleotide (nt) positions +240 to +274 are thought to form a stem-loop secondary structure, termed SL1, that serves as a dimerization initiation site for viral genomic RNA. We have generated two distinct deletion mutations within this region, termed BH10-LD3 and BH10-LD4, involving nt positions +238 to +253 and +261 to +274, respectively, and have shown that each of these resulted in significant diminutions in levels of viral infectiousness. However, long-term culture of each of these viruses in MT-2 cells resulted in a restoration of infectiousness, due to a series of compensatory point mutations within four distinct proteins that are normally cleaved from the Gag precursor. In the case of BH10-LD3, these four mutations were MA1, CA1, MP2, and MNC, and they involved changes of amino acid Val-35 to Ile within the matrix protein (MA), Ile-91 to Thr within the capsid (CA), Thr-12 to Ile within p2, and Thr-24 to Ile within the nucleocapsid (NC). The order in which these mutations were acquired by the mutated BH10-LD3 was MNC > CA1 > MP2 > MA1. The results of site-directed mutagenesis studies confirmed that each of these four substitutions contributed to the increased viability of the mutated BH10-LD3 viruses and that the MNC substitution, which was acquired first, played the most important role in this regard. Three point mutations, MP2, MNC, and MA2, were also shown to be sequentially acquired by viruses that had emerged in culture from the BH10-LD4 deletion. The first two of these were identical to those described above, while the last involved a change of Val-35 to Leu. All three of these substitutions were necessary to restore the infectiousness of mutated BH10-LD4 viruses to wild-type levels, although the MP2 mutation alone, but neither of the other two substitutions, was able to confer some viability on BH10-LD4 viruses. Studies of viral RNA packaging showed that the BH10-LD4 deletion only marginally impaired encapsidation while the BH10-LD3 deletion caused a severe deficit in this regard. 相似文献