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Nucleolar Protein Trafficking in Response to HIV-1 Tat: Rewiring the Nucleolus

The trans-activator Tat protein is a viral regulatory protein essential for HIV-1 replication. Tat trafficks to the nucleoplasm and the nucleolus. The nucleolus, a highly dynamic and structured membrane-less sub-nuclear compartment, is the site of rRNA and ribosome biogenesis and is involved in nume...

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Autores principales: Jarboui, Mohamed Ali, Bidoia, Carlo, Woods, Elena, Roe, Barbara, Wynne, Kieran, Elia, Giuliano, Hall, William W., Gautier, Virginie W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3499507/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23166591
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048702
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author Jarboui, Mohamed Ali
Bidoia, Carlo
Woods, Elena
Roe, Barbara
Wynne, Kieran
Elia, Giuliano
Hall, William W.
Gautier, Virginie W.
author_facet Jarboui, Mohamed Ali
Bidoia, Carlo
Woods, Elena
Roe, Barbara
Wynne, Kieran
Elia, Giuliano
Hall, William W.
Gautier, Virginie W.
author_sort Jarboui, Mohamed Ali
collection PubMed
description The trans-activator Tat protein is a viral regulatory protein essential for HIV-1 replication. Tat trafficks to the nucleoplasm and the nucleolus. The nucleolus, a highly dynamic and structured membrane-less sub-nuclear compartment, is the site of rRNA and ribosome biogenesis and is involved in numerous cellular functions including transcriptional regulation, cell cycle control and viral infection. Importantly, transient nucleolar trafficking of both Tat and HIV-1 viral transcripts are critical in HIV-1 replication, however, the role(s) of the nucleolus in HIV-1 replication remains unclear. To better understand how the interaction of Tat with the nucleolar machinery contributes to HIV-1 pathogenesis, we investigated the quantitative changes in the composition of the nucleolar proteome of Jurkat T-cells stably expressing HIV-1 Tat fused to a TAP tag. Using an organellar proteomic approach based on mass spectrometry, coupled with Stable Isotope Labelling in Cell culture (SILAC), we quantified 520 proteins, including 49 proteins showing significant changes in abundance in Jurkat T-cell nucleolus upon Tat expression. Numerous proteins exhibiting a fold change were well characterised Tat interactors and/or known to be critical for HIV-1 replication. This suggests that the spatial control and subcellular compartimentaliation of these cellular cofactors by Tat provide an additional layer of control for regulating cellular machinery involved in HIV-1 pathogenesis. Pathway analysis and network reconstruction revealed that Tat expression specifically resulted in the nucleolar enrichment of proteins collectively participating in ribosomal biogenesis, protein homeostasis, metabolic pathways including glycolytic, pentose phosphate, nucleotides and amino acids biosynthetic pathways, stress response, T-cell signaling pathways and genome integrity. We present here the first differential profiling of the nucleolar proteome of T-cells expressing HIV-1 Tat. We discuss how these proteins collectively participate in interconnected networks converging to adapt the nucleolus dynamic activities, which favor host biosynthetic activities and may contribute to create a cellular environment supporting robust HIV-1 production.
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spelling pubmed-34995072012-11-19 Nucleolar Protein Trafficking in Response to HIV-1 Tat: Rewiring the Nucleolus Jarboui, Mohamed Ali Bidoia, Carlo Woods, Elena Roe, Barbara Wynne, Kieran Elia, Giuliano Hall, William W. Gautier, Virginie W. PLoS One Research Article The trans-activator Tat protein is a viral regulatory protein essential for HIV-1 replication. Tat trafficks to the nucleoplasm and the nucleolus. The nucleolus, a highly dynamic and structured membrane-less sub-nuclear compartment, is the site of rRNA and ribosome biogenesis and is involved in numerous cellular functions including transcriptional regulation, cell cycle control and viral infection. Importantly, transient nucleolar trafficking of both Tat and HIV-1 viral transcripts are critical in HIV-1 replication, however, the role(s) of the nucleolus in HIV-1 replication remains unclear. To better understand how the interaction of Tat with the nucleolar machinery contributes to HIV-1 pathogenesis, we investigated the quantitative changes in the composition of the nucleolar proteome of Jurkat T-cells stably expressing HIV-1 Tat fused to a TAP tag. Using an organellar proteomic approach based on mass spectrometry, coupled with Stable Isotope Labelling in Cell culture (SILAC), we quantified 520 proteins, including 49 proteins showing significant changes in abundance in Jurkat T-cell nucleolus upon Tat expression. Numerous proteins exhibiting a fold change were well characterised Tat interactors and/or known to be critical for HIV-1 replication. This suggests that the spatial control and subcellular compartimentaliation of these cellular cofactors by Tat provide an additional layer of control for regulating cellular machinery involved in HIV-1 pathogenesis. Pathway analysis and network reconstruction revealed that Tat expression specifically resulted in the nucleolar enrichment of proteins collectively participating in ribosomal biogenesis, protein homeostasis, metabolic pathways including glycolytic, pentose phosphate, nucleotides and amino acids biosynthetic pathways, stress response, T-cell signaling pathways and genome integrity. We present here the first differential profiling of the nucleolar proteome of T-cells expressing HIV-1 Tat. We discuss how these proteins collectively participate in interconnected networks converging to adapt the nucleolus dynamic activities, which favor host biosynthetic activities and may contribute to create a cellular environment supporting robust HIV-1 production. Public Library of Science 2012-11-15 /pmc/articles/PMC3499507/ /pubmed/23166591 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048702 Text en © 2012 Jarboui et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Jarboui, Mohamed Ali
Bidoia, Carlo
Woods, Elena
Roe, Barbara
Wynne, Kieran
Elia, Giuliano
Hall, William W.
Gautier, Virginie W.
Nucleolar Protein Trafficking in Response to HIV-1 Tat: Rewiring the Nucleolus
title Nucleolar Protein Trafficking in Response to HIV-1 Tat: Rewiring the Nucleolus
title_full Nucleolar Protein Trafficking in Response to HIV-1 Tat: Rewiring the Nucleolus
title_fullStr Nucleolar Protein Trafficking in Response to HIV-1 Tat: Rewiring the Nucleolus
title_full_unstemmed Nucleolar Protein Trafficking in Response to HIV-1 Tat: Rewiring the Nucleolus
title_short Nucleolar Protein Trafficking in Response to HIV-1 Tat: Rewiring the Nucleolus
title_sort nucleolar protein trafficking in response to hiv-1 tat: rewiring the nucleolus
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3499507/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23166591
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048702
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