16 results on '"Luban, Jeremy"'
Search Results
2. Lv4 Is a Capsid-Specific Antiviral Activity in Human Blood Cells That Restricts Viruses of the SIVMAC/SIVSM/HIV-2 Lineage Prior to Integration.
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Pizzato M, McCauley SM, Neagu MR, Pertel T, Firrito C, Ziglio S, Dauphin A, Zufferey M, Berthoux L, and Luban J
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- Animals, Cell Line, Dendritic Cells drug effects, Dendritic Cells virology, HIV-2 genetics, HIV-2 immunology, Humans, Leukocytes, Mononuclear immunology, Simian Immunodeficiency Virus genetics, T-Lymphocytes drug effects, T-Lymphocytes virology, Antiviral Agents pharmacology, Capsid microbiology, HIV-2 drug effects, Leukocytes, Mononuclear virology, Simian Immunodeficiency Virus drug effects, Virus Integration drug effects
- Abstract
HIV-2 and SIVMAC are AIDS-causing, zoonotic lentiviruses that jumped to humans and rhesus macaques, respectively, from SIVSM-bearing sooty mangabey monkeys. Cross-species transmission events such as these sometimes necessitate virus adaptation to species-specific, host restriction factors such as TRIM5. Here, a new human restriction activity is described that blocks viruses of the SIVSM/SIVMAC/HIV-2 lineage. Human T, B, and myeloid cell lines, peripheral blood mononuclear cells and dendritic cells were 4 to >100-fold less transducible by VSV G-pseudotyped SIVMAC, HIV-2, or SIVSM than by HIV-1. In contrast, transduction of six epithelial cell lines was equivalent to that by HIV-1. Substitution of HIV-1 CA with the SIVMAC or HIV-2 CA was sufficient to reduce HIV-1 transduction to the level of the respective vectors. Among such CA chimeras there was a general trend such that CAs from epidemic HIV-2 Group A and B isolates were the most infectious on human T cells, CA from a 1° sooty mangabey isolate was the least infectious, and non-epidemic HIV-2 Group D, E, F, and G CAs were in the middle. The CA-specific decrease in infectivity was observed with either HIV-1, HIV-2, ecotropic MLV, or ALV Env pseudotypes, indicating that it was independent of the virus entry pathway. As2O3, a drug that suppresses TRIM5-mediated restriction, increased human blood cell transduction by SIVMAC but not by HIV-1. Nonetheless, elimination of TRIM5 restriction activity did not rescue SIVMAC transduction. Also, in contrast to TRIM5-mediated restriction, the SIVMAC CA-specific block occurred after completion of reverse transcription and the formation of 2-LTR circles, but before establishment of the provirus. Transduction efficiency in heterokaryons generated by fusing epithelial cells with T cells resembled that in the T cells, indicative of a dominant-acting SIVMAC restriction activity in the latter. These results suggest that the nucleus of human blood cells possesses a restriction factor specific for the CA of HIV-2/SIVMAC/SIVSM and that cross-species transmission of SIVSM to human T cells necessitated adaptation of HIV-2 to this putative restriction factor.
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- 2015
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3. The fate of HIV-1 capsid: a biochemical assay for HIV-1 uncoating.
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Yang Y, Luban J, and Diaz-Griffero F
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- Animals, Capsid Proteins metabolism, HIV-1 physiology, HeLa Cells, Humans, Protein Subunits metabolism, Virus Replication, Capsid metabolism, HIV-1 metabolism
- Abstract
The uncoating process of HIV-1 is a poorly understood process, so the development of a reliable assay to study uncoating is critical for moving the field forward. Here we describe an uncoating assay that currently represents the state-of-the-art biochemical procedure for monitoring uncoating and core stability during infection. This assay is based on the biochemical separation of soluble capsid protein from particulate capsid cores and provides information about the fate of the capsid during infection.
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- 2014
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4. TRIM5 structure, HIV-1 capsid recognition, and innate immune signaling.
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Grütter MG and Luban J
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- Animals, Antiviral Restriction Factors, Carrier Proteins genetics, Carrier Proteins immunology, HIV Infections genetics, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 genetics, Humans, Protein Conformation, Signal Transduction, Tripartite Motif Proteins, Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases, Capsid immunology, Carrier Proteins chemistry, HIV Infections immunology, HIV-1 immunology, Immunity, Innate
- Abstract
TRIM5 is a restriction factor that blocks retrovirus infection soon after the virion core enters the cell cytoplasm. Restriction activity is targeted to the virion core via recognition of the capsid protein lattice that encases the viral genomic RNA. In common with all of the many TRIM family members, TRIM5 has RING, B-box, and coiled-coil domains. As an E3 ubiquitin ligase TRIM5 cooperates with the heterodimeric E2, UBC13/UEV1A, to activate the TAK1 (MAP3K7) kinase, NF-κB and AP-1 signaling, and the transcription of inflammatory cytokines and chemokines. TAK1, UBC13, and UEV1A all contribute to TRIM5-mediated retrovirus restriction activity. Interaction of the carboxy-terminal PRYSPRY or cyclophilin domains of TRIM5 with the retroviral capsid lattice stimulates the formation of a complementary lattice by TRIM5, with greatly increased TRIM5 E3 activity, and host cell signal transduction. Structural and biochemical studies on TRIM5 have opened a much needed window on how the innate immune system detects the distinct molecular features of HIV-1 and other retroviruses., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2012
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5. TRIM5 is an innate immune sensor for the retrovirus capsid lattice.
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Pertel T, Hausmann S, Morger D, Züger S, Guerra J, Lascano J, Reinhard C, Santoni FA, Uchil PD, Chatel L, Bisiaux A, Albert ML, Strambio-De-Castillia C, Mothes W, Pizzato M, Grütter MG, and Luban J
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- Antiviral Restriction Factors, Carrier Proteins genetics, Cell Line, Enzyme Activation, HEK293 Cells, HIV-1 chemistry, HIV-1 immunology, Humans, Lipopolysaccharides immunology, Lipopolysaccharides pharmacology, MAP Kinase Kinase Kinases metabolism, NF-kappa B metabolism, Protein Binding, Receptors, Pattern Recognition immunology, Receptors, Pattern Recognition metabolism, Retroviridae chemistry, Signal Transduction drug effects, Signal Transduction immunology, Transcription Factor AP-1 metabolism, Transcription Factors metabolism, Tripartite Motif Proteins, Ubiquitin metabolism, Ubiquitin-Conjugating Enzymes metabolism, Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases genetics, Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases immunology, Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases metabolism, Capsid chemistry, Capsid immunology, Carrier Proteins immunology, Carrier Proteins metabolism, Immunity, Innate immunology, Retroviridae immunology
- Abstract
TRIM5 is a RING domain-E3 ubiquitin ligase that restricts infection by human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 and other retroviruses immediately following virus invasion of the target cell cytoplasm. Antiviral potency correlates with TRIM5 avidity for the retrovirion capsid lattice and several reports indicate that TRIM5 has a role in signal transduction, but the precise mechanism of restriction is unknown. Here we demonstrate that TRIM5 promotes innate immune signalling and that this activity is amplified by retroviral infection and interaction with the capsid lattice. Acting with the heterodimeric, ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme UBC13-UEV1A (also known as UBE2N-UBE2V1), TRIM5 catalyses the synthesis of unattached K63-linked ubiquitin chains that activate the TAK1 (also known as MAP3K7) kinase complex and stimulate AP-1 and NFκB signalling. Interaction with the HIV-1 capsid lattice greatly enhances the UBC13-UEV1A-dependent E3 activity of TRIM5 and challenge with retroviruses induces the transcription of AP-1 and NF-κB-dependent factors with a magnitude that tracks with TRIM5 avidity for the invading capsid. Finally, TAK1 and UBC13-UEV1A contribute to capsid-specific restriction by TRIM5. Thus, the retroviral restriction factor TRIM5 has two additional activities that are linked to restriction: it constitutively promotes innate immune signalling and it acts as a pattern recognition receptor specific for the retrovirus capsid lattice.
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- 2011
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6. TRIM34 restricts HIV-1 and SIV capsids in a TRIM5α-dependent manner.
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Ohainle, Molly, Kim, Kyusik, Komurlu Keceli, Sevnur, Felton, Abby, Campbell, Ed, Luban, Jeremy, and Emerman, Michael
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Antiviral Restriction Factors ,Capsid ,Capsid Proteins ,Carrier Proteins ,Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats ,HEK293 Cells ,HIV Infections ,HIV Seropositivity ,HIV-1 ,HeLa Cells ,Humans ,Reverse Transcription ,Tripartite Motif Proteins ,Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases ,Virus Integration - Abstract
The HIV-1 capsid protein makes up the core of the virion and plays a critical role in early steps of HIV replication. Due to its exposure in the cytoplasm after entry, HIV capsid is a target for host cell factors that act directly to block infection such as TRIM5α and MxB. Several host proteins also play a role in facilitating infection, including in the protection of HIV-1 capsid from recognition by host cell restriction factors. Through an unbiased screening approach, called HIV-CRISPR, we show that the CPSF6-binding deficient, N74D HIV-1 capsid mutant is sensitive to restriction mediated by human TRIM34, a close paralog of the well-characterized HIV restriction factor TRIM5α. This restriction occurs at the step of reverse transcription, is independent of interferon stimulation, and limits HIV-1 infection in key target cells of HIV infection including CD4+ T cells and monocyte-derived dendritic cells. TRIM34 can also restrict some SIV capsids. TRIM34 restriction requires TRIM5α as knockout or knockdown of TRIM5α results in a loss of antiviral activity. Through immunofluorescence studies, we show that TRIM34 and TRIM5α colocalize to cytoplasmic bodies and are more frequently observed to be associated with infecting N74D capsids than with WT HIV-1 capsids. Our results identify TRIM34 as an HIV-1 CA-targeting restriction factor and highlight the potential role for heteromultimeric TRIM interactions in contributing to restriction of HIV-1 infection in human cells.
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- 2020
7. Cyclophilin a Is Required for TRIM5α-Mediated Resistance to HIV-1 in Old World Monkey Cells
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Luban, Jeremy
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- 2005
8. More than one way to TRIM a capsid
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Luban, Jeremy
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- 2012
9. Inhibition of HIV-1 infection by TNPO3 depletion is determined by capsid and detectable after viral cDNA enters the nucleus
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De Iaco Alberto and Luban Jeremy
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HIV-1 ,capsid ,integrase ,TNPO3 ,Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 - Abstract
Abstract Background HIV-1 infects non-dividing cells. This implies that the virus traverses the nuclear pore before it integrates into chromosomal DNA. Recent studies demonstrated that TNPO3 is required for full infectivity of HIV-1. The fact that TNPO3 is a karyopherin suggests that it acts by directly promoting nuclear entry of HIV-1. Some studies support this hypothesis, while others have failed to do so. Additionally, some studies suggest that TNPO3 acts via HIV-1 Integrase (IN), and others indicate that it acts via capsid (CA). Results To shed light on the mechanism by which TNPO3 contributes to HIV-1 infection we engineered a panel of twenty-seven single-cycle HIV-1 vectors each bearing a different CA mutation and characterized them for the ability to transduce cells in which TNPO3 had been knocked down (KD). Fourteen CA mutants were relatively TNPO3-independent, as compared to wild-type (WT) HIV-1. Two mutants were more TNPO3-dependent than the WT, and eleven mutants were actually inhibited by TNPO3. The efficiency of the synthesis of viral cDNA, 2-LTR circles, and proviral DNA was then assessed for WT HIV-1 and three select CA mutants. Controls included rescue of TNPO3 KD with non-targetable coding sequence, RT- and IN- mutant viruses, and pharmacologic inhibitors of RT and IN. TNPO3 KD blocked transduction and establishment of proviral DNA by wild-type HIV-1 with no significant effect on the level of 2-LTR circles. PCR results were confirmed by achieving TNPO3 KD using two different methodologies (lentiviral vector and siRNA oligonucleotide transfection); by challenging three different cell types; by using two different challenge viruses, each necessitating different sets of PCR primers; and by pseudotyping virus with VSV G or using HIV-1 Env. Conclusion TNPO3 promotes HIV-1 infectivity at a step in the virus life cycle that is detectable after the preintegration complex arrives in the nucleus and CA is the viral determinant for TNPO3 dependence.
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- 2011
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10. HIV-1 capsid is involved in post-nuclear entry steps.
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Nan-Yu Chen, Lihong Zhou, Gane, Paul J., Opp, Silvana, Ball, Neil J., Nicastro, Giuseppe, Zufferey, Madeleine, Buffone, Cindy, Luban, Jeremy, Selwood, David, Diaz-Griffero, Felipe, Taylor, Ian, and Fassati, Ariberto
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NUCLEOPORINS ,CAPSIDS ,NUCLEAR proteins ,ISOTHERMAL titration calorimetry ,MOLECULAR docking ,PROTEIN binding - Abstract
Background: HIV-1 capsid influences viral uncoating and nuclear import. Some capsid is detected in the nucleus but it is unclear if it has any function. We reported that the antibiotic Coumermycin-A1 (C-A1) inhibits HIV-1 integration and that a capsid mutation confers resistance to C-A1, suggesting that capsid might affect post-nuclear entry steps. Results: Here we report that C-A1 inhibits HIV-1 integration in a capsid-dependent way. Using molecular docking, we identify an extended binding pocket delimited by two adjacent capsid monomers where C-A1 is predicted to bind. Isothermal titration calorimetry confirmed that C-A1 binds to hexameric capsid. Cyclosporine washout assays in Jurkat CD4+ T cells expressing engineered human TRIMCyp showed that C-A1 causes faster and greater escape from TRIMCyp restriction. Sub-cellular fractionation showed that small amounts of capsid accumulated in the nuclei of infected cells and C-A1 reduced the nuclear capsid. A105S and N74D capsid mutant viruses did not accumulate capsid in the nucleus, irrespective of C-A1 treatment. Depletion of Nup153, a nucleoporin located at the nuclear side of the nuclear pore that binds to HIV-1 capsid, made the virus less susceptible to TRIMCyp restriction, suggesting that Nup153 may help maintain some integrity of the viral core in the nucleus. Furthermore C-A1 increased binding of CPSF6, a nuclear protein, to capsid. Conclusions: Our results indicate that capsid is involved in post-nuclear entry steps preceding integration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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11. Cyclophilin A promotes HIV-1 reverse transcription but its effect on transduction correlates best with its effect on nuclear entry of viral cDNA.
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De Iaco, Alberto and Luban, Jeremy
- Subjects
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CYCLOPHILINS , *ISOMERASES , *CAPSIDS , *CYCLOSPORINE , *CELL lines , *CELL culture - Abstract
Background The human peptidyl-prolyl isomerase Cyclophilin A (CypA) binds HIV-1 capsid (CA) and influences early steps in the HIV-1 replication cycle. The mechanism by which CypA regulates HIV-1 transduction efficiency is unknown. Disruption of CypA binding to CA, either by genetic means or by the competitive inhibitor cyclosporine A (CsA), reduces the efficiency of HIV-1 transduction in some cells but not in others. Transduction of certain cell types increases significantly when CypA binding to particular HIV-1 CA mutants, i.e., A92E, is prevented. Previous studies have suggested that this cell type-specific effect is due to a dominant-acting, CypA-dependent restriction factor. Results Here we investigated the mechanism by which CypA regulates HIV-1 transduction efficiency using 27 different human cell lines, 32 HeLa subclones, and several previously characterized HIV-1 CA mutants. Disruption of CypA binding to wild-type CA, or to any of the mutant CAs, caused a decrease in HIV-1 reverse transcription in all the cell lines analyzed here. This block to reverse transcription, though, did not correlate with cell type-specific effects on transduction efficiency. The level of 2-LTR circles, a marker for nuclear transport of the viral cDNA that results from reverse transcription, correlated closely with effects on infectivity. No correlation was observed between the cell type-specific effects on infectivity and the steady-state CypA protein levels in these cells. Instead, as indicated by a fate-of-capsid assay, CsA released the HIV-1 CA core from an apparent state of hyperstabilization, in a cell typespecific manner. 2 Conclusion These data demonstrate that, while CypA promotes reverse transcription under all conditions tested here, its effect on HIV-1 infectivity correlates more closely with effects on nuclear entry of the viral cDNA. The data also support the hypothesis that a cell-type specific CypAdependent restriction factor blocks HIV-1 replication by delaying CA core uncoating and hindering nuclear entry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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12. TNPO3 protects HIV-1 replication from CPSF6-mediated capsid stabilization in the host cell cytoplasm.
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De Iaco, Alberto, Santoni, Federico, Vannier, Anne, Guipponi, Michel, Antonarakis, Stylianos, and Luban, Jeremy
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HIV infections ,VIRAL replication ,KARYOPHERINS ,CELL nuclei ,CAPSIDS ,CYTOPLASM - Abstract
Background: Despite intensive investigation the mechanism by which HIV-1 reaches the host cell nucleus is unknown. TNPO3, a karyopherin mediating nuclear entry of SR-proteins, was shown to be required for HIV-1 infectivity. Some investigators have reported that TNPO3 promotes HIV-1 nuclear import, as would be expected for a karyopherin. Yet, an equal number of investigators have failed to obtain evidence that supports this model. Here, a series of experiments were performed to better elucidate the mechanism by which TNPO3 promotes HIV-1 infectivity Results: To examine the role of TNPO3 in HIV-1 replication, the 2-LTR circles that are commonly used as a marker for HIV-1 nuclear entry were cloned after infection of TNPO3 knockdown cells. Potential explanation for the discrepancy in the literature concerning the effect of TNPO3 was provided by sequencing hundreds of these clones: a significant fraction resulted from autointegration into sites near the LTRs and therefore were not bona fide 2-LTR circles. In response to this finding, new techniques were developed to monitor HIV-1 cDNA, including qPCR reactions that distinguish 2-LTR circles from autointegrants, as well as massive parallel sequencing of HIV-1 cDNA. With these assays, TNPO3 knockdown was found to reduce the levels of 2-LTR circles. This finding was puzzling, though, since previous work has shown that the HIV-1 determinant for TNPO3-dependence is capsid (CA), an HIV-1 protein that forms a mega-dalton protein lattice in the cytoplasm. TNPO3 imports cellular splicing factors via their SR-domain. Attention was therefore directed towards CPSF6, an SR-protein that binds HIV-1 CA and inhibits HIV-1 nuclear import when the C-terminal SR-domain is deleted. The effect of 27 HIV-1 capsid mutants on sensitivity to TNPO3 knockdown was then found to correlate strongly with sensitivity to inhibition by a C-terminal deletion mutant of CPSF6 (R2 = 0.883, p < 0.0001). TNPO3 knockdown was then shown to cause CPSF6 to accumulate in the cytoplasm. Mislocalization of CPSF6 to the cytoplasm, whether by TNPO3 knockdown, deletion of the CPSF6 nuclear localization signal, or by fusion of CPSF6 to a nuclear export signal, resulted in inhibition of HIV-1 replication. Additionally, targeting CPSF6 to the nucleus by fusion to a heterologous nuclear localization signal rescued HIV-1 from the inhibitory effects of TNPO3 knockdown. Finally, mislocalization of CPSF6 to the cytoplasm was associated with abnormal stabilization of the HIV-1 CA core. Conclusion: TNPO3 promotes HIV-1 infectivity indirectly, by shifting the CA-binding protein CPSF6 to the nucleus, thus preventing the excessive HIV-1 CA stability that would otherwise result from cytoplasmic accumulation of CPSF6. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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13. Cyclophilin A facilitates HIV-1 integration.
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Padron, Adrian, Dwivedi, Richa, Chakraborty, Rajasree, Prakash, Prem, Kyusik Kim, Jiong Shi, Jinwoo Ahn, Jui Pandhare, Luban, Jeremy, Aiken, Christopher, Balasubramaniam, Muthukumar, and Dash, Chandravanu
- Abstract
Cyclophilin A (CypA) binds to the HIV-1 capsid to facilitate reverse transcription and nuclear entry and counter the antiviral activity of TRIM5a. Interestingly, recent studies suggest that the capsid enters the nucleus of an infected cell and uncoats prior to integration. We have previously reported that the capsid protein regulates HIV-1 integration. Therefore, we probed whether CypA-capsid interaction also regulates this post-nuclear entry step. First, we challenged CypA-expressing (CypA+/+) and CypA-depleted (CypA-/-) cells with HIV-1 and quantified the levels of provirus. CypA-depletion significantly reduced integration, an effect that was independent of CypA's effect on reverse transcription, nuclear entry, and the presence or absence of TRIM5a. In addition, cyclosporin A, an inhibitor that disrupts CypA-capsid binding, inhibited proviral integration in CypA+/+ cells but not in CypA-/- cells. HIV-1 capsid mutants (G89V and P90A) deficient in CypA binding were also blocked at the integration step in CypA+/+ cells but not in CypA-/- cells. Then, to understand the mechanism, we assessed the integration activity of the HIV-1 preintegration complexes (PICs) extracted from acutely infected cells. PICs from CypA-/- cells retained lower integration activity in vitro compared to those from CypA+/+ cells. PICs from cells depleted of both CypA and TRIM5a also had lower activity, suggesting that CypA's effect on PIC was independent of TRIM5a. Finally, CypA protein specifically stimulated PIC activity, as this effect was significantly blocked by CsA. Collectively, these results provide strong evidence that CypA directly promotes HIV-1 integration, a previously unknown role of this host factor in the nucleus of an infected cell. IMPORTANCE Interaction between the HIV-1 capsid and host cellular factors is essential for infection. However, the molecular details and functional consequences of viral-host factor interactions during HIV-1 infection are not fully understood. Over 30 years ago, Cyclophilin A (CypA) was identified as the first host protein to bind to the HIV-1 capsid. Now it is established that CypA-capsid interaction promotes reverse transcription and nuclear entry of HIV-1. In addition, CypA blocks TRIM5a-mediated restriction of HIV-1. In this report, we show that CypA promotes the post-nuclear entry step of HIV-1 integration by binding to the viral capsid. Notably, we show that CypA stimulates the viral DNA integration activity of the HIV-1 preintegration complex. Collectively, our studies identify a novel role of CypA during the early steps of HIV-1 infection. This new knowledge is important because recent reports suggest that an operationally intact HIV-1 capsid enters the nucleus of an infected cell. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Emerging role of cyclophilin A in HIV-1 infection: from producer cell to the target cell nucleus.
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Padron, Adrian, Prakash, Prem, Pandhare, Jui, Luban, Jeremy, Aiken, Chris, Balasubramaniam, Muthukumar, and Dash, Chandravanu
- Subjects
- *
CELL nuclei , *HIV , *CYCLOPHILINS , *CYTOSKELETAL proteins , *KNOWLEDGE gap theory - Abstract
The HIV-1 genome encodes a small number of proteins with structural, enzymatic, regulatory, and accessory functions. These viral proteins interact with a number of host factors to promote the early and late stages of HIV-1 infection. During the early stages of infection, interactions between the viral proteins and host factors enable HIV-1 to enter the target cell, traverse the cytosol, dock at the nuclear pore, gain access to the nucleus, and integrate into the host genome. Similarly, the viral proteins recruit another set of host factors during the late stages of infection to orchestrate HIV-1 transcription, translation, assembly, and release of progeny virions. Among the host factors implicated in HIV-1 infection, Cyclophilin A (CypA) was identified as the first host factor to be packaged within HIV-1 particles. It is now well established that CypA promotes HIV-1 infection by directly binding to the viral capsid. Mechanistic models to pinpoint CypA's role have spanned from an effect in the producer cell to the early steps of infection in the target cell. In this review, we will describe our understanding of the role(s) of CypA in HIV-1 infection, highlight the current knowledge gaps, and discuss the potential role of this host factor in the post-nuclear entry steps of HIV-1 infection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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15. The Three-Fold Axis of the HIV-1 Capsid Lattice Is the Species-Specific Binding Interface for TRIM5α.
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Morger, Damien, Zosel, Franziska, Bühlmann, Martin, Züger, Sara, Mittelviefhaus, Maximilian, Schuler, Benjamin, Luban, Jeremy, and Grütter, Markus G.
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- *
HIV infections , *CAPSIDS , *THERMOPHORESIS , *CYSTEINE , *VIRAL proteins - Abstract
Rhesus TRIM5α (rhTRIM5α) potently restricts replication of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). Restriction is mediated through direct binding of the C-terminal B30.2 domain of TRIM5α to the assembled HIV-1 capsid core. This host-pathogen interaction involves multiple capsid molecules within the hexagonal HIV-1 capsid lattice. However, the molecular details of this interaction and the precise site at which the B30.2 domain binds remain largely unknown. The human orthologue of TRIM5α (hsTRIM5α) fails to block infection by HIV-1 both in vivo and in vitro. This is thought to be due to differences in binding to the capsid lattice. To map the species-specific binding surface on the HIV-1 capsid lattice, we used microscale thermophoresis and dual-focus fluorescence correlation spectroscopy to measure binding affinity of rhesus and human TRIM5α B30.2 domains to a series of HIV-1 capsid variants that mimic distinct capsid arrangements at each of the symmetry axes of the HIV-1 capsid lattice. These surrogates include previously characterized capsid oligomers, as well as a novel chemically cross-linked capsid trimer that contains cysteine substitutions near the 3-fold axis of symmetry. The results demonstrate that TRIM5α binding involves multiple capsid molecules along the 2-fold and 3-fold interfaces between hexamers and indicate that the binding interface at the 3-fold axis contributes to the well-established differences in restriction potency between TRIM5α orthologues. IMPORTANCE TRIM5α is a cellular protein that fends off infection by retroviruses through binding to the viruses' protein shell surrounding its genetic material. This shell is composed of several hundred capsid proteins arranged in a honeycomb-like hexagonal pattern that is conserved across retroviruses. By binding to the complex lattice formed by multiple capsid proteins, rather than to a single capsid monomer, TRIM5α restriction activity persists despite the high mutation rate in retroviruses such as HIV-1. In rhesus monkeys, but not in humans, TRIM5α confers resistance to HIV-1. By measuring the binding of human and rhesus TRIM5α to a series of engineered HIV-1 capsid mimics of distinct capsid lattice interfaces, we reveal the HIV-1 capsid surface critical for species-specific binding by TRIM5α. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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16. TRIM5 structure, HIV-1 capsid recognition, and innate immune signaling
- Author
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Markus G. Grütter, Jeremy Luban, University of Zurich, and Luban, Jeremy
- Subjects
Protein Conformation ,viruses ,Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases ,HIV Infections ,Article ,Antiviral Restriction Factors ,Tripartite Motif Proteins ,03 medical and health sciences ,Retrovirus ,Capsid ,Transcription (biology) ,Virology ,10019 Department of Biochemistry ,Animals ,Humans ,Cyclophilin ,030304 developmental biology ,0303 health sciences ,Innate immune system ,biology ,030306 microbiology ,biology.organism_classification ,Immunity, Innate ,3. Good health ,Ubiquitin ligase ,biology.protein ,HIV-1 ,2406 Virology ,570 Life sciences ,Signal transduction ,Carrier Proteins ,TRIM Family ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
TRIM5 is a restriction factor that blocks retrovirus infection soon after the virion core enters the cell cytoplasm. Restriction activity is targeted to the virion core via recognition of the capsid protein lattice that encases the viral genomic RNA. In common with all of the many TRIM family members, TRIM5 has RING, B-box, and coiled-coil domains. As an E3 ubiquitin ligase TRIM5 cooperates with the heterodimeric E2, UBC13/UEV1A, to activate the TAK1 (MAP3K7) kinase, NF-κB and AP-1 signaling, and the transcription of inflammatory cytokines and chemokines. TAK1, UBC13, and UEV1A all contribute to TRIM5-mediated retrovirus restriction activity. Interaction of the carboxy-terminal PRYSPRY or cyclophilin domains of TRIM5 with the retroviral capsid lattice stimulates the formation of a complementary lattice by TRIM5, with greatly increased TRIM5 E3 activity, and host cell signal transduction. Structural and biochemical studies on TRIM5 have opened a much needed window on how the innate immune system detects the distinct molecular features of HIV-1 and other retroviruses.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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