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5'-Cap sequestration is an essential determinant of HIV-1 genome packaging. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • HIV-1 selectively packages two copies of its RNA genome during assembly, relying on the viral Gag protein and specific signals in the RNA’s structure for this process.
  • A critical 159-nucleotide region of the RNA that normally facilitates packaging shows poor efficiency when competing with the intact 5' leader, indicating that certain structural elements may hinder packaging.
  • The study reveals that effective packaging depends on both hiding the RNA's 5' cap from cellular machinery and exposing binding sites for the viral nucleocapsid protein, suggesting a complex mechanism that may be shared by other viruses that utilize similar RNA packaging strategies.

Article Abstract

HIV-1 selectively packages two copies of its 5'-capped RNA genome (gRNA) during virus assembly, a process mediated by the nucleocapsid (NC) domain of the viral Gag polyprotein and encapsidation signals located within the dimeric 5' leader of the viral RNA. Although residues within the leader that promote packaging have been identified, the determinants of authentic packaging fidelity and efficiency remain unknown. Here, we show that a previously characterized 159-nt region of the leader that possesses all elements required for RNA dimerization, high-affinity NC binding, and packaging in a noncompetitive RNA packaging assay (Ψ) is unexpectedly poorly packaged when assayed in competition with the intact 5' leader. Ψ lacks a 5'-tandem hairpin element that sequesters the 5' cap, suggesting that cap sequestration may be important for packaging. Consistent with this hypothesis, mutations within the intact leader that expose the cap without disrupting RNA structure or NC binding abrogated RNA packaging, and genetic addition of a 5' ribozyme to Ψ to enable cotranscriptional shedding of the 5' cap promoted Ψ-mediated RNA packaging to wild-type levels. Additional mutations that either block dimerization or eliminate subsets of NC binding sites substantially attenuated competitive packaging. Our studies indicate that packaging is achieved by a bipartite mechanism that requires both sequestration of the 5' cap and exposure of NC binding sites that reside fully within the Ψ region of the dimeric leader. We speculate that cap sequestration prevents irreversible capture by the cellular RNA processing and translation machinery, a mechanism likely employed by other viruses that package 5'-capped RNA genomes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8449379PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2112475118DOI Listing

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