[PDF][PDF] HIV-1-associated uracil DNA glycosylase activity controls dUTP misincorporation in viral DNA and is essential to the HIV-1 life cycle

S Priet, N Gros, JM Navarro, J Boretto, B Canard… - Molecular cell, 2005 - cell.com
S Priet, N Gros, JM Navarro, J Boretto, B Canard, G Quérat, J Sire
Molecular cell, 2005cell.com
Uracilation of DNA represents a constant threat to the survival of many organisms including
viruses. Uracil may appear in DNA either by cytosine deamination or by misincorporation of
dUTP. The HIV-1-encoded Vif protein controls cytosine deamination by preventing the
incorporation of host-derived APOBEC3G cytidine deaminase into viral particles. Here, we
show that the host-derived uracil DNA glycosylase UNG2 enzyme, which is recruited into
viral particles by the HIV-1-encoded integrase domain, is essential to the viral life cycle. We …
Abstract
Uracilation of DNA represents a constant threat to the survival of many organisms including viruses. Uracil may appear in DNA either by cytosine deamination or by misincorporation of dUTP. The HIV-1-encoded Vif protein controls cytosine deamination by preventing the incorporation of host-derived APOBEC3G cytidine deaminase into viral particles. Here, we show that the host-derived uracil DNA glycosylase UNG2 enzyme, which is recruited into viral particles by the HIV-1-encoded integrase domain, is essential to the viral life cycle. We demonstrate that virion-associated UNG2 catalytic activity can be replaced by the packaging of heterologous dUTPase into virion, indicating that UNG2 acts to counteract dUTP misincorporation in the viral genome. Therefore, HIV-1 prevents incorporation of dUTP in viral cDNA by UNG2-mediated uracil excision followed by a dNTP-dependent, reverse transcriptase-mediated endonucleolytic cleavage and finally by strand-displacement polymerization. Our findings indicate that pharmacologic strategies aimed toward blocking UNG2 packaging should be explored as potential HIV/AIDS therapeutics.
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