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Plasma Membrane Anchoring and Gag:Gag Multimerization on Viral RNA Are Critical Properties of HIV-1 Gag Required To Mediate Efficient Genome Packaging

  1. Author:
    Duchon, Alice
    Santos, Steven
    Chen, Jianbo
    Brown, Matthew
    Nikolaitchik, Olga A.
    Tai, Sheldon
    Chao, Jeffrey A.
    Freed,Eric
    Pathak,Vinay
    Hu, Wei-Shau
  2. Author Address

    NCI, Viral Recombinat Sect, HIV Dynam & Replicat Program, Frederick, MD 21702 USA.Friedrich Miescher Inst Biomed Res, Basel, Switzerland.NCI, Virus Cell Interact Sect, Frederick, MD 21701 USA.NCI, Viral Mutat Sect, HIV Dynam & Replicat Program, Frederick, MD 21701 USA.
    1. Year: 2021
    2. Date: Nov-Dec
  1. Journal: mBio
  2. Amer Soc Microbiology
    1. 12
    2. 6
  3. Type of Article: Article
  4. Article Number: ARTN e03254-21
  5. ISSN: 2150-7511
  1. Abstract:

    Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Gag selects and packages the HIV RNA genome during virus assembly. However, HIV-1 RNA constitutes only a small fraction of the cellular RNA. Although Gag exhibits a slight preference to viral RNA, most of the cytoplasmic Gag proteins are associated with cellular RNAs. Thus, it is not understood how HIV-1 achieves highly efficient genome packaging. We hypothesize that besides RNA binding, other properties of Gag are important for genome packaging. Many Gag mutants have assembly defects that preclude analysis of their effects on genome packaging. To bypass this challenge, we established complementation systems that separate the particle-assembling and RNA-binding functions of Gag: we used a set of Gag proteins to drive particle assembly and an RNA binding Gag to package HIV-1 RNA. We have developed two types of RNA-binding Gag in which packaging is mediated by the authentic nucleocapsid (NC) domain or by a nonviral RNA-binding domain. We found that in both cases, mutations that affect the multimerization or plasma membrane anchoring properties of Gag reduce or abolish RNA packaging. These mutant Gag can coassemble into particles but cannot package the RNA genome efficiently. Our findings indicate that HIV-1 RNA packaging occurs at the plasma membrane and RNA-binding Gag needs to multimerize on RNA to encapsidate the viral genome.

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External Sources

  1. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1128/mbio.03254-21
  2. WOS: 000736922100006

Library Notes

  1. Fiscal Year: FY2021-2022
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