Cargando…

Biochemical and virological analysis of the 18-residue C-terminal tail of HIV-1 integrase

BACKGROUND: The 18 residue tail abutting the SH3 fold that comprises the heart of the C-terminal domain is the only part of HIV-1 integrase yet to be visualized by structural biology. To ascertain the role of the tail region in integrase function and HIV-1 replication, a set of deletion mutants that...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Dar, Mohd J, Monel, Blandine, Krishnan, Lavanya, Shun, Ming-Chieh, Di Nunzio, Francesca, Helland, Dag E, Engelman, Alan
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2770994/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19840380
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-6-94
_version_ 1782173712956522496
author Dar, Mohd J
Monel, Blandine
Krishnan, Lavanya
Shun, Ming-Chieh
Di Nunzio, Francesca
Helland, Dag E
Engelman, Alan
author_facet Dar, Mohd J
Monel, Blandine
Krishnan, Lavanya
Shun, Ming-Chieh
Di Nunzio, Francesca
Helland, Dag E
Engelman, Alan
author_sort Dar, Mohd J
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The 18 residue tail abutting the SH3 fold that comprises the heart of the C-terminal domain is the only part of HIV-1 integrase yet to be visualized by structural biology. To ascertain the role of the tail region in integrase function and HIV-1 replication, a set of deletion mutants that successively lacked three amino acids was constructed and analyzed in a variety of biochemical and virus infection assays. HIV-1/2 chimers, which harbored the analogous 23-mer HIV-2 tail in place of the HIV-1 sequence, were also studied. Because integrase mutations can affect steps in the replication cycle other than integration, defective mutant viruses were tested for integrase protein content and reverse transcription in addition to integration. The F185K core domain mutation, which increases integrase protein solubility, was furthermore analyzed in a subset of mutants. RESULTS: Purified proteins were assessed for in vitro levels of 3' processing and DNA strand transfer activities whereas HIV-1 infectivity was measured using luciferase reporter viruses. Deletions lacking up to 9 amino acids (1-285, 1-282, and 1-279) displayed near wild-type activities in vitro and during infection. Further deletion yielded two viruses, HIV-1(1-276 )and HIV-1(1-273), that displayed approximately two and 5-fold infectivity defects, respectively, due to reduced integrase function. Deletion mutant HIV-1(1-270 )and the HIV-1/2 chimera were non-infectious and displayed approximately 3 to 4-fold reverse transcription in addition to severe integration defects. Removal of four additional residues, which encompassed the C-terminal β strand of the SH3 fold, further compromised integrase incorporation into virions and reverse transcription. CONCLUSION: HIV-1(1-270), HIV-1(1-266), and the HIV-1/2 chimera were typed as class II mutant viruses due to their pleiotropic replication defects. We speculate that residues 271-273 might play a role in mediating the known integrase-reverse transcriptase interaction, as their removal unveiled a reverse transcription defect. The F185K mutation reduced the in vitro activities of 1-279 and 1-276 integrases by about 25%. Mutant proteins 1-279/F185K and 1-276/F185K are therefore highlighted as potential structural biology candidates, whereas further deleted tail variants (1-273/F185K or 1-270/F185K) are less desirable due to marginal or undetectable levels of integrase function.
format Text
id pubmed-2770994
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2009
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-27709942009-10-31 Biochemical and virological analysis of the 18-residue C-terminal tail of HIV-1 integrase Dar, Mohd J Monel, Blandine Krishnan, Lavanya Shun, Ming-Chieh Di Nunzio, Francesca Helland, Dag E Engelman, Alan Retrovirology Research BACKGROUND: The 18 residue tail abutting the SH3 fold that comprises the heart of the C-terminal domain is the only part of HIV-1 integrase yet to be visualized by structural biology. To ascertain the role of the tail region in integrase function and HIV-1 replication, a set of deletion mutants that successively lacked three amino acids was constructed and analyzed in a variety of biochemical and virus infection assays. HIV-1/2 chimers, which harbored the analogous 23-mer HIV-2 tail in place of the HIV-1 sequence, were also studied. Because integrase mutations can affect steps in the replication cycle other than integration, defective mutant viruses were tested for integrase protein content and reverse transcription in addition to integration. The F185K core domain mutation, which increases integrase protein solubility, was furthermore analyzed in a subset of mutants. RESULTS: Purified proteins were assessed for in vitro levels of 3' processing and DNA strand transfer activities whereas HIV-1 infectivity was measured using luciferase reporter viruses. Deletions lacking up to 9 amino acids (1-285, 1-282, and 1-279) displayed near wild-type activities in vitro and during infection. Further deletion yielded two viruses, HIV-1(1-276 )and HIV-1(1-273), that displayed approximately two and 5-fold infectivity defects, respectively, due to reduced integrase function. Deletion mutant HIV-1(1-270 )and the HIV-1/2 chimera were non-infectious and displayed approximately 3 to 4-fold reverse transcription in addition to severe integration defects. Removal of four additional residues, which encompassed the C-terminal β strand of the SH3 fold, further compromised integrase incorporation into virions and reverse transcription. CONCLUSION: HIV-1(1-270), HIV-1(1-266), and the HIV-1/2 chimera were typed as class II mutant viruses due to their pleiotropic replication defects. We speculate that residues 271-273 might play a role in mediating the known integrase-reverse transcriptase interaction, as their removal unveiled a reverse transcription defect. The F185K mutation reduced the in vitro activities of 1-279 and 1-276 integrases by about 25%. Mutant proteins 1-279/F185K and 1-276/F185K are therefore highlighted as potential structural biology candidates, whereas further deleted tail variants (1-273/F185K or 1-270/F185K) are less desirable due to marginal or undetectable levels of integrase function. BioMed Central 2009-10-19 /pmc/articles/PMC2770994/ /pubmed/19840380 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-6-94 Text en Copyright © 2009 Dar et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Dar, Mohd J
Monel, Blandine
Krishnan, Lavanya
Shun, Ming-Chieh
Di Nunzio, Francesca
Helland, Dag E
Engelman, Alan
Biochemical and virological analysis of the 18-residue C-terminal tail of HIV-1 integrase
title Biochemical and virological analysis of the 18-residue C-terminal tail of HIV-1 integrase
title_full Biochemical and virological analysis of the 18-residue C-terminal tail of HIV-1 integrase
title_fullStr Biochemical and virological analysis of the 18-residue C-terminal tail of HIV-1 integrase
title_full_unstemmed Biochemical and virological analysis of the 18-residue C-terminal tail of HIV-1 integrase
title_short Biochemical and virological analysis of the 18-residue C-terminal tail of HIV-1 integrase
title_sort biochemical and virological analysis of the 18-residue c-terminal tail of hiv-1 integrase
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2770994/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19840380
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-6-94
work_keys_str_mv AT darmohdj biochemicalandvirologicalanalysisofthe18residuecterminaltailofhiv1integrase
AT monelblandine biochemicalandvirologicalanalysisofthe18residuecterminaltailofhiv1integrase
AT krishnanlavanya biochemicalandvirologicalanalysisofthe18residuecterminaltailofhiv1integrase
AT shunmingchieh biochemicalandvirologicalanalysisofthe18residuecterminaltailofhiv1integrase
AT dinunziofrancesca biochemicalandvirologicalanalysisofthe18residuecterminaltailofhiv1integrase
AT hellanddage biochemicalandvirologicalanalysisofthe18residuecterminaltailofhiv1integrase
AT engelmanalan biochemicalandvirologicalanalysisofthe18residuecterminaltailofhiv1integrase