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Strict conservation of the retroviral nucleocapsid protein zinc finger is strongly influenced by its role in viral infection processes: Characterization of HIV-1 particles containing mutant nucleocapsid zinc-coordinating sequences

  1. Author:
    Gorelick, R. J.
    Gagliardi, T. D.
    Bosche, W. J.
    Wiltrout, T. A.
    Coren, L. V.
    Chabot, D. J.
    Lifson, J. D.
    Henderson, L. E.
    Arthur, A. O.
  2. Author Address

    Gorelick RJ NCI, Frederick Canc Res & Dev Ctr, AIDS Vaccine Program, SAIC Frederick Frederick, MD 21702 USA NCI, Frederick Canc Res & Dev Ctr, AIDS Vaccine Program, SAIC Frederick Frederick, MD 21702 USA
    1. Year: 1999
  1. Journal: Virology
    1. 256
    2. 1
    3. Pages: 92-104
  2. Type of Article: Article
  1. Abstract:

    The retroviral nucleocapsid (NC) protein contains highly conserved amino acid sequences (-Cys-X-2-Cys-X-4-His-X-4-Cys-) designated retroviral (CCHC) Zn2+ fingers. The NC protein of murine leukemia viruses contains one NC Zn2+ finger and mutants that were competent in metal binding (CCCC and CCHH) packaged wild-type levels of full-length viral RNA but were not infectious. These studies were extended to human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), a virus with two NC Zn2+ fingers. Viruses with combinations of CCHC, CCCC, and CCHH Zn2+ fingers in each position of HIV-I NC were characterized. Mutant particles contained the normal complement of processed viral proteins. Four mutants packaged roughly wild-type levels of genomic RNA, whereas the remaining mutants packaged reduced levels. Virions with mutated C-terminal position NC fingers were replication competent One interesting mutant, containing a CCCC Zn2+ finger in the N-terminal position of NC, packaged wild-type levels of viral RNA and showed similar to 5% wild-type levels of infectivity when examined in CD4-expressing HeLa cells containing an HIV-1 LTR/beta-galactosidase construct. However, this particular mutant was replication defective in H9 cells; all other mutants were replication defective over the 8-week course of the assay. Two long terminal repeat viral DNA species could be detected in the CCCC mutant but not in any of the other replication-defective mutants. These studies show that the N-terminal Zn2+ finger position is more sensitive to alterations than the C-terminal position with respect to replication. Additionally, the retroviral (CCHC) NC Zn2+ finger is required for early infection processes. The evolutionary pressure to maintain CCHC NC Zn2+ fingers depends mainly on its function in infection processes, in addition to its function in genome packaging. [References: 50]

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