HIV-1 Gag Processing Intermediates Trans-dominantly Interfere with HIV-1 Infectivity

Protease inhibitors (PI) act by blocking human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) polyprotein processing, but there is no direct quantitative correlation between the degree of impairment of Gag processing and virion infectivity at low PI concentrations. To analyze the consequences of partial processing, v...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2009-10, Vol.284 (43), p.29692-29703
Hauptverfasser: Müller, Barbara, Anders, Maria, Akiyama, Hisashi, Welsch, Sonja, Glass, Bärbel, Nikovics, Krisztina, Clavel, Francois, Tervo, Hanna-Mari, Keppler, Oliver T., Kräusslich, Hans-Georg
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Protease inhibitors (PI) act by blocking human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) polyprotein processing, but there is no direct quantitative correlation between the degree of impairment of Gag processing and virion infectivity at low PI concentrations. To analyze the consequences of partial processing, virus particles were produced in the presence of limiting PI concentrations or by co-transfection of wild-type proviral plasmids with constructs carrying mutations in one or more cleavage sites. Low PI concentrations caused subtle changes in polyprotein processing associated with a pronounced reduction of particle infectivity. Dissection of individual stages of viral entry indicated a block in accumulation of reverse transcriptase products, whereas virus entry, enzymatic reverse transcriptase activity, and replication steps following reverse transcription were not affected. Co-expression of low amounts of partially processed forms of Gag together with wild-type HIV generally exerted a trans-dominant effect, which was most prominent for a construct carrying mutations at both cleavage sites flanking the CA domain. Interestingly, co-expression of low amounts of Gag mutated at the CA-SP1 cleavage site also affected processing activity at this site in the wild-type virus. The results indicate that low amounts (
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M109.027144