Acetylation of HIV-1 Tat by CBP/P300 Increases Transcription of Integrated HIV-1 Genome and Enhances Binding to Core Histones

The HIV-1 Tat protein is required for viral replication and is a potent stimulator of viral transcription. Although Tat has been extensively studied in various reductive paradigms, to date there is little information as to how this activator mediates transcription from natural nucleosomally packaged...

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Veröffentlicht in:Virology (New York, N.Y.) N.Y.), 2000-11, Vol.277 (2), p.278-295
Hauptverfasser: Deng, Longwen, de la Fuente, Cynthia, Fu, Peng, Wang, Lai, Donnelly, Robert, Wade, John D., Lambert, Paul, Li, Hong, Lee, Chee-Gun, Kashanchi, Fatah
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The HIV-1 Tat protein is required for viral replication and is a potent stimulator of viral transcription. Although Tat has been extensively studied in various reductive paradigms, to date there is little information as to how this activator mediates transcription from natural nucleosomally packaged long terminal repeats. Here we show that CREB-binding protein (CBP)/p300 interacts with the HIV-1 Tat protein and serves as a coactivator of Tat-dependent HIV-1 gene expression on an integrated HIV-1 provirus. The site of acetylation of Tat was mapped to the double-lysine motif in a highly conserved region, 49RKKRRQ54, of the basic RNA-binding motif of Tat. Using HLM1 cells (HIV-1+/Tat−), which contain a single copy of full-length HIV-1 provirus with a triple termination codon at the first AUG of the Tat gene, we find that only wild type, and not K50A, K51A, or K50A/K51A alone or in combination of ectopic CBP/p300, is able to produce full-length infectious virions, as measured by p24 gag ELISAs. Tat binds CBP/p300 in the minimal histone acetyltransferase domain (1253–1710) and the binding is stable up to 0.85 M salt wash conditions. Interestingly, wild-type peptide 41–54, and not other Tat peptides, changes the conformation of the CBP/p300 such that it can acquire and bind better to basal factors such as TBP and TFIIB, indicating that Tat may influence the transcription machinery by helping CBP/p300 to recruit new partners into the transcription machinery. Finally, using biotinylated wild-type or acetylated peptides, we find that acetylation decreases Tat's ability to bind the TAR RNA element, as well as to bind basal factors such as TBP, CBP, Core-Pol II, or cyclin T. However, the acetylated Tat peptide is able to bind to core histones on a nucleosome assembled HIV-1 proviral DNA.
ISSN:0042-6822
1096-0341
DOI:10.1006/viro.2000.0593