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In vivo analysis of highly conserved Nef activities in HIV-1 replication and pathogenesis

BACKGROUND: The HIV-1 accessory protein, Nef, is decisive for progression to AIDS. In vitro characterization of the protein has described many Nef activities of unknown in vivo significance including CD4 downregulation and a number of activities that depend on Nef interacting with host SH3 domain pr...

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Autores principales: Watkins, Richard L, Zou, Wei, Denton, Paul W, Krisko, John F, Foster, John L, Garcia, J Victor
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3907037/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24172637
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-10-125
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author Watkins, Richard L
Zou, Wei
Denton, Paul W
Krisko, John F
Foster, John L
Garcia, J Victor
author_facet Watkins, Richard L
Zou, Wei
Denton, Paul W
Krisko, John F
Foster, John L
Garcia, J Victor
author_sort Watkins, Richard L
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The HIV-1 accessory protein, Nef, is decisive for progression to AIDS. In vitro characterization of the protein has described many Nef activities of unknown in vivo significance including CD4 downregulation and a number of activities that depend on Nef interacting with host SH3 domain proteins. Here, we use the BLT humanized mouse model of HIV-1 infection to assess their impact on viral replication and pathogenesis and the selection pressure to restore these activities using enforced in vivo evolution. RESULTS: We followed the evolution of HIV-1(LAI) (LAI) with a frame-shifted nef (LAINeffs) during infection of BLT mice. LAINeffs was rapidly replaced in blood by virus with short deletions in nef that restored the open reading frame (LAINeffs∆-1 and LAINeffs∆-13). Subsequently, LAINeffs∆-1 was often replaced by wild type LAI. Unexpectedly, LAINeffs∆-1 and LAINeffs∆-13 Nefs were specifically defective for CD4 downregulation activity. Viruses with these mutant nefs were used to infect BLT mice. LAINeffs∆-1 and LAINeffs∆-13 exhibited three-fold reduced viral replication (compared to LAI) and a 50% reduction of systemic CD4(+) T cells (>90% for LAI) demonstrating the importance of CD4 downregulation. These results also demonstrate that functions other than CD4 downregulation enhanced viral replication and pathogenesis of LAINeffs∆-1 and LAINeffs∆-13 compared to LAINeffs. To gain insight into the nature of these activities, we constructed the double mutant P72A/P75A. Multiple Nef activities can be negated by mutating the SH3 domain binding site (P72Q73V74P75L76R77) to P72A/P75A and this mutation does not affect CD4 downregulation. Virus with nef mutated to P72A/P75A closely resembled the wild-type virus in vivo as viral replication and pathogenesis was not significantly altered. Unlike LAINeffs described above, the P72A/P75A mutation had a very weak tendency to revert to wild type sequence. CONCLUSIONS: The in vivo phenotype of Nef is significantly dependent on CD4 downregulation but minimally on the numerous Nef activities that require an intact SH3 domain binding motif. These results suggest that CD4 downregulation plus one or more unknown Nef activities contribute to enhanced viral replication and pathogenesis and are suitable targets for anti-HIV therapy. Enforced evolution studies in BLT mice will greatly facilitate identification of these critical activities.
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spelling pubmed-39070372014-01-31 In vivo analysis of highly conserved Nef activities in HIV-1 replication and pathogenesis Watkins, Richard L Zou, Wei Denton, Paul W Krisko, John F Foster, John L Garcia, J Victor Retrovirology Research BACKGROUND: The HIV-1 accessory protein, Nef, is decisive for progression to AIDS. In vitro characterization of the protein has described many Nef activities of unknown in vivo significance including CD4 downregulation and a number of activities that depend on Nef interacting with host SH3 domain proteins. Here, we use the BLT humanized mouse model of HIV-1 infection to assess their impact on viral replication and pathogenesis and the selection pressure to restore these activities using enforced in vivo evolution. RESULTS: We followed the evolution of HIV-1(LAI) (LAI) with a frame-shifted nef (LAINeffs) during infection of BLT mice. LAINeffs was rapidly replaced in blood by virus with short deletions in nef that restored the open reading frame (LAINeffs∆-1 and LAINeffs∆-13). Subsequently, LAINeffs∆-1 was often replaced by wild type LAI. Unexpectedly, LAINeffs∆-1 and LAINeffs∆-13 Nefs were specifically defective for CD4 downregulation activity. Viruses with these mutant nefs were used to infect BLT mice. LAINeffs∆-1 and LAINeffs∆-13 exhibited three-fold reduced viral replication (compared to LAI) and a 50% reduction of systemic CD4(+) T cells (>90% for LAI) demonstrating the importance of CD4 downregulation. These results also demonstrate that functions other than CD4 downregulation enhanced viral replication and pathogenesis of LAINeffs∆-1 and LAINeffs∆-13 compared to LAINeffs. To gain insight into the nature of these activities, we constructed the double mutant P72A/P75A. Multiple Nef activities can be negated by mutating the SH3 domain binding site (P72Q73V74P75L76R77) to P72A/P75A and this mutation does not affect CD4 downregulation. Virus with nef mutated to P72A/P75A closely resembled the wild-type virus in vivo as viral replication and pathogenesis was not significantly altered. Unlike LAINeffs described above, the P72A/P75A mutation had a very weak tendency to revert to wild type sequence. CONCLUSIONS: The in vivo phenotype of Nef is significantly dependent on CD4 downregulation but minimally on the numerous Nef activities that require an intact SH3 domain binding motif. These results suggest that CD4 downregulation plus one or more unknown Nef activities contribute to enhanced viral replication and pathogenesis and are suitable targets for anti-HIV therapy. Enforced evolution studies in BLT mice will greatly facilitate identification of these critical activities. BioMed Central 2013-10-30 /pmc/articles/PMC3907037/ /pubmed/24172637 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-10-125 Text en Copyright © 2013 Watkins 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
Watkins, Richard L
Zou, Wei
Denton, Paul W
Krisko, John F
Foster, John L
Garcia, J Victor
In vivo analysis of highly conserved Nef activities in HIV-1 replication and pathogenesis
title In vivo analysis of highly conserved Nef activities in HIV-1 replication and pathogenesis
title_full In vivo analysis of highly conserved Nef activities in HIV-1 replication and pathogenesis
title_fullStr In vivo analysis of highly conserved Nef activities in HIV-1 replication and pathogenesis
title_full_unstemmed In vivo analysis of highly conserved Nef activities in HIV-1 replication and pathogenesis
title_short In vivo analysis of highly conserved Nef activities in HIV-1 replication and pathogenesis
title_sort in vivo analysis of highly conserved nef activities in hiv-1 replication and pathogenesis
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3907037/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24172637
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-10-125
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