Research Captures Transient Details of HIV Genome Packaging

Posted: February 28, 2015 at 10:43 am

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Newswise Once HIV-1 has hijacked a host cell to make copies of its own RNA genome and viral proteins, it must assemble these components into new virus particles. The orchestration of this intricate assembly process falls to a viral protein known as Gag. For one thing, Gag must be able to discern viral RNA from the host cells and squirrel it away inside new viral particles no easy task considering only two to three percent of the RNA found in the cytoplasm is from HIV-1. Exactly how Gag selectively packages viral RNA has been widely speculated but never directly observed.

Now a team of researchers from Paul Bieniaszs Laboratory of Retrovirology at The Rockefeller University and the Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center have employed a recently developed technique to capture in a sort of molecular freeze-frame just how Gag accomplishes this feat. In research published recently in Cell, they reveal that Gag undergoes dramatic and transient changes in binding preferences that allow it to precisely select viral RNA for packaging into new viruses.

One of the functions of Gag is to choose the viral RNA from all the RNA present in the cell to package into a viral particle, which will then go on to infect a new cell, say Bieniasz. Gag, the major structural protein of HIV-1, floats about as individual molecules in the cytoplasm, but to assemble new viruses, thousands of Gag coalesce at the host cells plasma membrane, forming an immature viral particle containing two strands of viral RNA.

Previous studies suggested that Gag targeted viral RNA by binding to a sequence known as psi, but many suspected that this interaction alone could not account for Gags ability to discriminate between viral and host cell RNA.

To observe just how Gag recruits viral RNA, the researchers turned to a technique known as crosslinking-immunoprecipitation (CLIP) sequencing, which uses ultraviolet light to fuse RNA and protein and preserve interactions for further analysis. CLIP essentially freezes the interaction in space and time, and tells you in a very localized, specific way the RNA sequences your protein was bound to, says first author Sebla B. Kutluay, a postdoctoral fellow in the lab.

Gag does indeed bind to psi on viral RNA, the researchers found, the first time this interaction has been demonstrated in a biologically relevant setting. But as they suspected, there was more to the story. When Gag moves to the plasma membrane, it appears to completely change its behavior and bind to many different sites throughout the HIV-1 genome.

By analyzing the RNA sequences bound by Gag, the researchers discovered that the protein seems to change its taste for nucleotides depending on location. Gag in the cytoplasm prefers RNA sequences rich in guanine, but at the plasma membrane, Gag is temporarily drawn to sequences rich in adenine. Strikingly, the genome of HIV-1 is particularly adenine-rich an unusual property of the HIV-1 genome that has heretofore puzzled scientists.

Such changes in RNA binding behavior would have been impossible to observe even a few years ago, before the availability of CLIP. Gag binding to adenine-rich RNAs was never seen before by any approach and could not have been seen by any other approach, says Bieniasz, noting that CLIP was developed by colleagues in Robert B. Darnells laboratory and refined in Thomas Tuschls laboratory at Rockefeller.

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Research Captures Transient Details of HIV Genome Packaging

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