Genetic analyses of conserved residues in the carboxyl-terminal domain of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 integrase

R Lu, HZ Ghory, A Engelman - Journal of virology, 2005 - Am Soc Microbiol
R Lu, HZ Ghory, A Engelman
Journal of virology, 2005Am Soc Microbiol
Results of in vitro assays identified residues in the C-terminal domain (CTD) of human
immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) integrase (IN) important for IN-IN and IN-DNA
interactions, but the potential roles of these residues in virus replication were mostly
unknown. Sixteen CTD residues were targeted here, generating 24 mutant viruses.
Replication-defective mutants were typed as class I (blocked at integration) or class II
(additional reverse transcription and/or assembly defects). Most defective viruses (15 of 17) …
Abstract
Results of in vitro assays identified residues in the C-terminal domain (CTD) of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) integrase (IN) important for IN-IN and IN-DNA interactions, but the potential roles of these residues in virus replication were mostly unknown. Sixteen CTD residues were targeted here, generating 24 mutant viruses. Replication-defective mutants were typed as class I (blocked at integration) or class II (additional reverse transcription and/or assembly defects). Most defective viruses (15 of 17) displayed reverse transcription defects. In contrast, replication-defective HIV-1E246K synthesized near-normal cDNA levels but processing of Pr55gag was largely inhibited in virus-producing cells. Because single-round HIV-1E246K.Luc(R-) transduced cells at approximately 8% of the wild-type level, we concluded that the late-stage processing defect contributed significantly to the overall replication defect of HIV-1E246K. Results of complementation assays revealed that the CTD could function in trans to the catalytic core domain (CCD) in in vitro assays, and we since determined that certain class I and class II mutants defined a novel genetic complementation group that functioned in cells independently of IN domain boundaries. Seven of eight novel Vpr-IN mutant proteins efficiently trans-complemented class I active-site mutant virus, demonstrating catalytically active CTD mutant proteins during infection. Because most of these mutants inefficiently complemented a class II CCD mutant virus, the majority of CTD mutants were likely more defective for interactions with cellular and/or viral components that affected reverse transcription and/or preintegration trafficking than the catalytic activity of the IN enzyme.
American Society for Microbiology