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The endoplasmic reticulum proteostasis network profoundly shapes the protein sequence space accessible to HIV envelope
Authors:Jimin Yoon  Emmanuel E Nekongo  Jessica E Patrick  Tiffani Hui  Angela M Phillips  Anna I Ponomarenko  Samuel J Hendel  Rebecca M Sebastian  Yu Meng Zhang  Vincent L Butty  C Brandon Ogbunugafor  Yu-Shan Lin  Matthew D Shoulders
Institution:1. Department of Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America;2. Department of Chemistry, Tufts University, Medford, Massachusetts, United States of America;3. BioMicro Center, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America;4. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, United States of America; Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, UNITED STATES
Abstract:The sequence space accessible to evolving proteins can be enhanced by cellular chaperones that assist biophysically defective clients in navigating complex folding landscapes. It is also possible, at least in theory, for proteostasis mechanisms that promote strict quality control to greatly constrain accessible protein sequence space. Unfortunately, most efforts to understand how proteostasis mechanisms influence evolution rely on artificial inhibition or genetic knockdown of specific chaperones. The few experiments that perturb quality control pathways also generally modulate the levels of only individual quality control factors. Here, we use chemical genetic strategies to tune proteostasis networks via natural stress response pathways that regulate the levels of entire suites of chaperones and quality control mechanisms. Specifically, we upregulate the unfolded protein response (UPR) to test the hypothesis that the host endoplasmic reticulum (ER) proteostasis network shapes the sequence space accessible to human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) envelope (Env) protein. Elucidating factors that enhance or constrain Env sequence space is critical because Env evolves extremely rapidly, yielding HIV strains with antibody- and drug-escape mutations. We find that UPR-mediated upregulation of ER proteostasis factors, particularly those controlled by the IRE1-XBP1s UPR arm, globally reduces Env mutational tolerance. Conserved, functionally important Env regions exhibit the largest decreases in mutational tolerance upon XBP1s induction. Our data indicate that this phenomenon likely reflects strict quality control endowed by XBP1s-mediated remodeling of the ER proteostasis environment. Intriguingly, and in contrast, specific regions of Env, including regions targeted by broadly neutralizing antibodies, display enhanced mutational tolerance when XBP1s is induced, hinting at a role for host proteostasis network hijacking in potentiating antibody escape. These observations reveal a key function for proteostasis networks in decreasing instead of expanding the sequence space accessible to client proteins, while also demonstrating that the host ER proteostasis network profoundly shapes the mutational tolerance of Env in ways that could have important consequences for HIV adaptation.

The host cell’s endoplasmic reticulum proteostasis network has a profound, constraining impact on the protein sequence space accessible to HIV’s envelope protein, which is a major target of the host’s adaptive immune system; in particular, upregulation of stringent quality control pathways appears to restrict the viability of destabilizing envelope variants.
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