HIV-1 hypermethylated guanosine cap licenses specialized translation unaffected by mTOR

Appended to the 5′ end of nascent RNA polymerase II transcripts is 7-methyl guanosine (m⁷G-cap) that engages nuclear cap-binding complex (CBC) to facilitate messenger RNA (mRNA) maturation. Mature mRNAs exchange CBC for eIF4E, the rate-limiting translation factor that is controlled through mTOR. Exp...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2022-01, Vol.119 (1), p.1-9
Hauptverfasser: Singh, Gatikrushna, Seufzer, Bradley, Song, Zhenwei, Zucko, Dora, Heng, Xiao, Boris-Lawrie, Kathleen
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Appended to the 5′ end of nascent RNA polymerase II transcripts is 7-methyl guanosine (m⁷G-cap) that engages nuclear cap-binding complex (CBC) to facilitate messenger RNA (mRNA) maturation. Mature mRNAs exchange CBC for eIF4E, the rate-limiting translation factor that is controlled through mTOR. Experiments in immune cells have now documented HIV-1 incompletely processed transcripts exhibited hypermethylated m⁷G-cap and that the down-regulation of the trimethylguanosine synthetase-1–reduced HIV-1 infectivity and virion protein synthesis by several orders of magnitude. HIV-1 cap hypermethylation required nuclear RNA helicase A (RHA)/DHX9 interaction with the shape of the 5′ untranslated region (UTR) primer binding site (PBS) segment. Down-regulation of RHA or the anomalous shape of the PBS segment abrogated hypermethylated caps and derepressed eIF4E binding for virion protein translation during global down-regulation of host translation. mTOR inhibition was detrimental to HIV-1 proliferation and attenuated Tat, Rev, and Nef synthesis. This study identified mutually exclusive translation pathways and the calibration of virion structural/accessory protein synthesis with de novo synthesis of the viral regulatory proteins. The hypermethylation of select, viral mRNA resulted in CBC exchange to heterodimeric CBP80/NCBP3 that expanded the functional capacity of HIV-1 in immune cells.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.2105153118