scholarly journals The HIV 5′ Gag Region Displays a Specific Nucleotide Bias Regulating Viral Splicing and Infectivity

Viruses ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 997
Author(s):  
Bastian Grewe ◽  
Carolin Vogt ◽  
Theresa Horstkötter ◽  
Bettina Tippler ◽  
Han Xiao ◽  
...  

Alternative splicing and the expression of intron-containing mRNAs is one hallmark of HIV gene expression. To facilitate the otherwise hampered nuclear export of non-fully processed mRNAs, HIV encodes the Rev protein, which recognizes its intronic response element and fuels the HIV RNAs into the CRM-1-dependent nuclear protein export pathway. Both alternative splicing and Rev-dependency are regulated by the primary HIV RNA sequence. Here, we show that these processes are extremely sensitive to sequence alterations in the 5’coding region of the HIV genomic RNA. Increasing the GC content by insertion of either GFP or silent mutations activates a cryptic splice donor site in gag, entirely deregulates the viral splicing pattern, and lowers infectivity. Interestingly, an adaptation of the inserted GFP sequence toward an HIV-like nucleotide bias reversed these phenotypes completely. Of note, the adaptation yielded completely different primary sequences although encoding the same amino acids. Thus, the phenotypes solely depend on the nucleotide composition of the two GFP versions. This is a strong indication of an HIV-specific mRNP code in the 5′ gag region wherein the primary RNA sequence bias creates motifs for RNA-binding proteins and controls the fate of the HIV-RNA in terms of viral gene expression and infectivity.

2016 ◽  
Vol 91 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan T. Behrens ◽  
Mounavya Aligeti ◽  
Ginger M. Pocock ◽  
Christina A. Higgins ◽  
Nathan M. Sherer

ABSTRACT HIV-1's Rev protein forms a homo-oligomeric adaptor complex linking viral RNAs to the cellular CRM1/Ran-GTP nuclear export machinery through the activity of Rev's prototypical leucine-rich nuclear export signal (NES). In this study, we used a functional fluorescently tagged Rev fusion protein as a platform to study the effects of modulating Rev NES identity, number, position, or strength on Rev subcellular trafficking, viral RNA nuclear export, and infectious virion production. We found that Rev activity was remarkably tolerant of diverse NES sequences, including supraphysiological NES (SNES) peptides that otherwise arrest CRM1 transport complexes at nuclear pores. Rev's ability to tolerate a SNES was both position and multimerization dependent, an observation consistent with a model wherein Rev self-association acts to transiently mask the NES peptide(s), thereby biasing Rev's trafficking into the nucleus. Combined imaging and functional assays also indicated that NES masking underpins Rev's well-known tendency to accumulate at the nucleolus, as well as Rev's capacity to activate optimal levels of late viral gene expression. We propose that Rev multimerization and NES masking regulates Rev's trafficking to and retention within the nucleus even prior to RNA binding. IMPORTANCE HIV-1 infects more than 34 million people worldwide causing >1 million deaths per year. Infectious virion production is activated by the essential viral Rev protein that mediates nuclear export of intron-bearing late-stage viral mRNAs. Rev's shuttling into and out of the nucleus is regulated by the antagonistic activities of both a peptide-encoded N-terminal nuclear localization signal and C-terminal nuclear export signal (NES). How Rev and related viral proteins balance strong import and export activities in order to achieve optimal levels of viral gene expression is incompletely understood. We provide evidence that multimerization provides a mechanism by which Rev transiently masks its NES peptide, thereby biasing its trafficking to and retention within the nucleus. Targeted pharmacological disruption of Rev-Rev interactions should perturb multiple Rev activities, both Rev-RNA binding and Rev's trafficking to the nucleus in the first place.


2009 ◽  
Vol 83 (9) ◽  
pp. 4591-4604 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco Caporale ◽  
Frederick Arnaud ◽  
Manuela Mura ◽  
Matthew Golder ◽  
Claudio Murgia ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Retroviruses use different strategies to regulate transcription and translation and exploit the cellular machinery involved in these processes. This study shows that the signal peptide of the envelope glycoprotein (Env) of Jaagsiekte sheep retrovirus (JSRV) plays a major role in posttranscriptional viral gene expression. Expression of the JSRV Env in trans increases viral particle production by mechanisms dependent on (i) its leader sequence, (ii) an intact signal peptide cleavage site, (iii) a cis-acting RNA-responsive element located in the viral genome, (iv) Crm1, and (v) B23. The signal peptide of the JSRV Env (JSE-SP) is 80 amino acid residues in length and contains putative nuclear localization and export signals, in addition to an arginine-rich RNA binding motif. JSE-SP localizes both in the endoplasmic reticulum and in the nucleus, where it colocalizes with nucleolar markers. JSE-SP is a multifunctional protein, as it moderately enhances nuclear export of unspliced viral mRNA and considerably increases viral particle release by favoring a posttranslational step of the replication cycle.


2002 ◽  
Vol 76 (23) ◽  
pp. 11866-11879 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joy Lengyel ◽  
Chandra Guy ◽  
Vivian Leong ◽  
Sarah Borge ◽  
Stephen A. Rice

ABSTRACT Infected-cell protein 27 (ICP27) is an essential herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) regulatory protein that activates a subset of viral delayed-early and late genes, at least in part through posttranscriptional mechanisms. Previous studies have shown that the amino (N)-terminal half of the protein contains important functional regions, including a leucine-rich nuclear export signal (NES). However, to date, the phenotype of an HSV-1 ICP27 NES mutant has not been reported. In this study, we engineered and characterized dLeu, an HSV-1 deletion mutant that specifically lacks ICP27's NES (amino acids 6 to 19). The phenotype of dLeu was analyzed alongside those of eight other ICP27 N-terminal deletion mutants. We found that in Vero cells, dLeu displays modest defects in viral gene expression and an approximately 100-fold reduction in the production of viral progeny. Unlike wild-type (WT) ICP27, which exhibits a cytoplasmic distribution in addition to its predominant nuclear localization, dLeu ICP27 is highly restricted to the cell nucleus. This strongly suggests that the N-terminal leucine-rich sequence functions as an NES during viral infection. Our analysis of dLeu and the other mutants has enabled us to genetically define the regions in the N-terminal 200 residues of ICP27 which are required for efficient viral growth in Vero cells. Only two regions appear to be important: (i) the leucine-rich NES and (ii) the RGG box RNA-binding domain, encoded by residues 139 to 153. A virus lacking the RGG box-encoding sequence, d4-5, has a phenotype similar to that of dLeu in that it displays modest defects in viral gene expression and grows poorly. Interestingly, deletion of both the NES and RGG box, as well as the sequences in between, is lethal. The resulting virus, d1-5, displays severe defects in viral gene expression and DNA synthesis and is unable to produce significant amounts of infectious progeny. Therefore, the N-terminal portion of ICP27 contains at least two functional domains which collectively are absolutely essential for viral infection.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin Tsai ◽  
Hal P. Bogerd ◽  
Edward M. Kennedy ◽  
Ann Emery ◽  
Ronald Swanstrom ◽  
...  

AbstractPrevious work in several laboratories has demonstrated that the epitranscriptomic addition of m6A to viral transcripts promotes the replication and pathogenicity of a wide range of DNA and RNA viruses, yet the underlying mechanisms responsible for this positive effect have remained unclear. It is known that m6A function is largely mediated by cellular m6A binding proteins or readers, yet how m6A readers regulate viral gene expression in general, and HIV-1 gene expression in particular, has been controversial. Here, we confirm that m6A addition indeed regulates HIV-1 RNA expression and demonstrate that this effect is in large part mediated by the the nuclear m6A reader YTHDC1 and the cytoplasmic m6A reader YTHDF2. Both YTHDC1 and YTHDF2 bind to multiple distinct and overlapping sites on the HIV-1 RNA genome, with YTHDC1 recruitment serving to regulate the alternative splicing of HIV-1 RNAs while YTHDF2 binding correlates with increased HIV-1 transcript stability.Author SummaryThis manuscript reports that the expression of mRNAs encoded by the pathogenic human retrovirus HIV-1 is regulated by the methylation of a small number of specific adenosine residues. These in turn recruit a nuclear RNA binding protein, called YTHDC1, which modulates the alternative splicing of HIV-1 transcripts, as well as a cytoplasmic RNA binding protein, called YTHDF2, which stabilizes viral mRNAs. The regulation of HIV-1 gene expression by adenosine methylation is therefore critical for the effective and ordered expression of HIV-1 mRNAs and could represent a novel target for antiviral development.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beatriz Alvarado-Hernandez ◽  
Yanping Ma ◽  
Nishi R. Sharma ◽  
Vladimir Majerciak ◽  
Alexei Lobanov ◽  
...  

Kaposi’s sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV) ORF57 is an RNA-binding post-transcriptional regulator. We recently applied an affinity-purified anti-ORF57 antibody to conduct ORF57-CLIP (Cross-linking Immunoprecipitation) in combination with RNA-sequencing (CLIP-seq) and analyzed the genome-wide host RNA transcripts in association with ORF57 in BCBL-1 cells with lytic KSHV infection. Mapping of the CLIPed RNA reads to the human genome (GRCh37) revealed that most of the ORF57-associated RNA reads were from rRNAs. The remaining RNA reads mapped to several classes of host non-coding and protein-coding mRNAs. We found ORF57 binds and regulates expression of a subset of host lncRNAs, including LINC00324, LINC00355, and LINC00839 which are involved in cell growth. ORF57 binds snoRNAs responsible for 18S and 28S rRNA modifications, but does not interact with fibrillarin and NOP58. We validated ORF57 interactions with 67 snoRNAs by ORF57-RNA immunoprecipitation (RIP)-snoRNA-array assays. Most of the identified ORF57 rRNA binding sites (BS) overlap with the sites binding snoRNAs. We confirmed ORF57-snoRA71B RNA interaction in BCBL-1 cells by ORF57-RIP and Northern blot analyses using a 32 P-labeled oligo probe from the 18S rRNA region complementary to snoRA71B. Using RNA oligos from the rRNA regions that ORF57 binds for oligo pulldown-Western blot assays, we selectively verified ORF57 interactions with 5.8S and 18S rRNAs. Polysome profiling revealed that ORF57 associates with both monosomes and polysomes and its association with polysomes increases PABPC1 binding to, but prevent Ago2 from polysomes. Our data indicate a functional correlation with ORF57 binding and suppression of Ago2 activities for ORF57 promotion of gene expression. Significance As an RNA-binding protein, KSHV ORF57 regulates RNA splicing, stability, and translation and inhibits host innate immunity by blocking the formation of RNA granules in virus infected cells. In this report, ORF57 was found to interact many host non-coding RNAs, including lncRNAs, snoRNAs and ribosomal RNAs to carry out additional unknown functions. ORF57 binds a group of lncRNAs via the identified RNA motifs by ORF57 CLIP-seq to regulate their expression. ORF57 associates with snoRNAs independently of fibrillarin and NOP58 proteins, and with ribosomal RNA in the regions that commonly bind snoRNAs. Knockdown of fibrillarin expression decreases the expression of snoRNAs and CDK4, but not affect viral gene expression. More importantly, we found that ORF57 binds translationally active polysomes and enhances PABPC-1 but prevents Ago2 association with polysomes. Data provide a compelling evidence on how ORF57 in KSHV infected cells might regulate protein synthesis by blocking Ago2’s hostile activities on translation.


eLife ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lizhen Chen ◽  
Zhijie Liu ◽  
Bing Zhou ◽  
Chaoliang Wei ◽  
Yu Zhou ◽  
...  

Axon injury triggers dramatic changes in gene expression. While transcriptional regulation of injury-induced gene expression is widely studied, less is known about the roles of RNA binding proteins (RBPs) in post-transcriptional regulation during axon regeneration. In C. elegans the CELF (CUGBP and Etr-3 Like Factor) family RBP UNC-75 is required for axon regeneration. Using crosslinking immunoprecipitation coupled with deep sequencing (CLIP-seq) we identify a set of genes involved in synaptic transmission as mRNA targets of UNC-75. In particular, we show that UNC-75 regulates alternative splicing of two mRNA isoforms of the SNARE Syntaxin/unc-64. In C. elegans mutants lacking unc-75 or its targets, regenerating axons form growth cones, yet are deficient in extension. Extending these findings to mammalian axon regeneration, we show that mouse Celf2 expression is upregulated after peripheral nerve injury and that Celf2 mutant mice are defective in axon regeneration. Further, mRNAs for several Syntaxins show CELF2 dependent regulation. Our data delineate a post-transcriptional regulatory pathway with a conserved role in regenerative axon extension.


2009 ◽  
Vol 83 (22) ◽  
pp. 11635-11644 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhao Han ◽  
Dinesh Verma ◽  
Chelsey Hilscher ◽  
Dirk P. Dittmer ◽  
Sankar Swaminathan

ABSTRACT Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) SM protein is an essential nuclear shuttling protein expressed by EBV early during the lytic phase of replication. SM acts to increase EBV lytic gene expression by binding EBV mRNAs and enhancing accumulation of the majority of EBV lytic cycle mRNAs. SM increases target mRNA stability and nuclear export, in addition to modulating RNA splicing. SM and its homologs in other herpesvirus have been hypothesized to function in part by binding viral RNAs and recruiting cellular export factors. Although activation of gene expression by SM is gene specific, it is unknown whether SM binds to mRNA in a specific manner or whether its RNA binding is target independent. SM-mRNA complexes were isolated from EBV-infected B-lymphocyte cell lines induced to permit lytic EBV replication, and a quantitative measurement of mRNAs corresponding to all known EBV open reading frames was performed by real-time quantitative reverse transcription-PCR. The results showed that although SM has broad RNA binding properties, there is a clear hierarchy of affinities among EBV mRNAs with respect to SM complex formation. In vitro binding assays with two of the most highly SM-associated transcripts suggested that SM binds preferentially to specific sequences or structures present in noncoding regions of some EBV mRNAs. Furthermore, the presence of these sequences conferred responsiveness to SM. These data are consistent with a mechanism of action similar to that of hnRNPs, which exert sequence-specific effects on gene expression despite having multiple degenerate consensus binding sites common to a large number of RNAs.


2010 ◽  
Vol 84 (22) ◽  
pp. 11781-11789 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dinesh Verma ◽  
Swarna Bais ◽  
Melusine Gaillard ◽  
Sankar Swaminathan

ABSTRACT Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) SM protein is an essential nuclear protein produced during the lytic cycle of EBV replication. SM is an RNA-binding protein with multiple mechanisms of action. SM enhances the expression of EBV genes by stabilizing mRNA and facilitating nuclear export. SM also influences splicing of both EBV and cellular pre-mRNAs. SM modulates splice site selection of the host cell STAT1 pre-mRNA, directing utilization of a novel 5′ splice site that is used only in the presence of SM. SM activates splicing in the manner of SR proteins but does not contain the canonical RS domains typical of cellular splicing factors. Affinity purification and mass spectrometry of SM complexes from SM-transfected cells led to the identification of the cellular SR splicing factor SRp20 as an SM-interacting protein. The regions of SM and SRp20 required for interaction were mapped by in vitro and in vivo assays. The SRp20 interaction was shown to be important for the effects of SM on alternative splicing by the use of STAT1 splicing assays. Overexpression of SRp20 enhanced SM-mediated alternative splicing and knockdown of SRp20 inhibited the SM effect on splicing. These data suggest a model whereby SM, a viral protein, recruits and co-opts the function of cellular SRp20 in alternative splicing.


Proceedings ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
pp. 134
Author(s):  
Mitchell P. Ledwith ◽  
Vy Tran ◽  
Thiprampai Thamamongood ◽  
Christina A. Higgins ◽  
Shashank Tripathi ◽  
...  

Hosts mount prudently tuned responses to viral infection in an attempt to block nearly every step of the replication cycle. Viruses must adapt to replicate in this hostile antiviral cellular state. Interferon stimulation or pathogen challenge robustly induces expression of IFIT (interferon-induced proteins with tetratricopeptide repeats) proteins. IFITs are a family of proteins that bind RNA and play antiviral roles during infection. Thus, we were surprised to identify the IFIT family as top candidate proviral host factors for influenza A virus (IAV) in a genome-wide CRISPR–Cas9 knockout screen. We validated the proviral activity of IFIT2 by showing that IFIT2-deficient cells support lower levels of IAV replication and exhibit defects in viral gene expression. The molecular functions of IFIT2, let alone how they are used by influenza virus, are unknown. Using CLIP-seq, we showed that IFIT2 binds directly to viral and cellular mRNAs in AU-rich regions largely in the 3’UTR, with a preference for a subset of interferon-stimulated mRNAs. IFIT2 also associates with actively translating ribosomes in infected cells to facilitate the translation of viral messages. IFIT2-responsive elements from an IAV mRNA were sufficient to confer translational enhancement to exogenous transcripts in cis. Conversely, mutation of these elements or the use of an IFIT2 RNA-binding mutant ablated stimulation of viral gene expression. Together, these data link the RNA-binding capability of IFIT2 to changes in translational efficiency of target viral mRNAs and the stimulation of viral replication. They establish a model for the normal function of IFIT2 as an antiviral protein affecting the post-transcriptional fate of cellular mRNAs and explain how influenza virus repurposes IFIT2 to support viral replication. Our work highlights a new node for the regulation of translation during interferon responses and highlights how canonical antiviral responses may be repurposed to support viral replication.


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