A template-dependent dislocation mechanism potentiates K65R reverse transcriptase mutation development in subtype C variants of HIV-1.

Numerous studies have suggested that the K65R reverse transcriptase (RT) mutation develops more readily in subtype C than subtype B HIV-1. We recently showed that this discrepancy lies partly in the subtype C template coding sequence that predisposes RT to pause at the site of K65R mutagenesis. Howe...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dimitrios Coutsinos, Cédric F Invernizzi, Daniela Moisi, Maureen Oliveira, Jorge L Martinez-Cajas, Bluma G Brenner, Mark A Wainberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3105016?pdf=render
id doaj-3ad80219ff8e4994934de1dc91c91d18
record_format Article
spelling doaj-3ad80219ff8e4994934de1dc91c91d182020-11-25T01:46:39ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-0165e2020810.1371/journal.pone.0020208A template-dependent dislocation mechanism potentiates K65R reverse transcriptase mutation development in subtype C variants of HIV-1.Dimitrios CoutsinosCédric F InvernizziDaniela MoisiMaureen OliveiraJorge L Martinez-CajasBluma G BrennerMark A WainbergNumerous studies have suggested that the K65R reverse transcriptase (RT) mutation develops more readily in subtype C than subtype B HIV-1. We recently showed that this discrepancy lies partly in the subtype C template coding sequence that predisposes RT to pause at the site of K65R mutagenesis. However, the mechanism underlying this observation and the elevated rates of K65R development remained unknown. Here, we report that DNA synthesis performed with subtype C templates consistently produced more K65R-containing transcripts than subtype B templates, regardless of the subtype-origin of the RT enzymes employed. These findings confirm that the mechanism involved is template-specific and RT-independent. In addition, a pattern of DNA synthesis characteristic of site-specific primer/template slippage and dislocation was only observed with the subtype C sequence. Analysis of RNA secondary structure suggested that the latter was unlikely to impact on K65R development between subtypes and that Streisinger strand slippage during DNA synthesis at the homopolymeric nucleotide stretch of the subtype C K65 region might occur, resulting in misalignment of the primer and template. Consequently, slippage would lead to a deletion of the middle adenine of codon K65 and the production of a -1 frameshift mutation, which upon dislocation and realignment of the primer and template, would lead to development of the K65R mutation. These findings provide additional mechanistic evidence for the facilitated development of the K65R mutation in subtype C HIV-1.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3105016?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dimitrios Coutsinos
Cédric F Invernizzi
Daniela Moisi
Maureen Oliveira
Jorge L Martinez-Cajas
Bluma G Brenner
Mark A Wainberg
spellingShingle Dimitrios Coutsinos
Cédric F Invernizzi
Daniela Moisi
Maureen Oliveira
Jorge L Martinez-Cajas
Bluma G Brenner
Mark A Wainberg
A template-dependent dislocation mechanism potentiates K65R reverse transcriptase mutation development in subtype C variants of HIV-1.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Dimitrios Coutsinos
Cédric F Invernizzi
Daniela Moisi
Maureen Oliveira
Jorge L Martinez-Cajas
Bluma G Brenner
Mark A Wainberg
author_sort Dimitrios Coutsinos
title A template-dependent dislocation mechanism potentiates K65R reverse transcriptase mutation development in subtype C variants of HIV-1.
title_short A template-dependent dislocation mechanism potentiates K65R reverse transcriptase mutation development in subtype C variants of HIV-1.
title_full A template-dependent dislocation mechanism potentiates K65R reverse transcriptase mutation development in subtype C variants of HIV-1.
title_fullStr A template-dependent dislocation mechanism potentiates K65R reverse transcriptase mutation development in subtype C variants of HIV-1.
title_full_unstemmed A template-dependent dislocation mechanism potentiates K65R reverse transcriptase mutation development in subtype C variants of HIV-1.
title_sort template-dependent dislocation mechanism potentiates k65r reverse transcriptase mutation development in subtype c variants of hiv-1.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Numerous studies have suggested that the K65R reverse transcriptase (RT) mutation develops more readily in subtype C than subtype B HIV-1. We recently showed that this discrepancy lies partly in the subtype C template coding sequence that predisposes RT to pause at the site of K65R mutagenesis. However, the mechanism underlying this observation and the elevated rates of K65R development remained unknown. Here, we report that DNA synthesis performed with subtype C templates consistently produced more K65R-containing transcripts than subtype B templates, regardless of the subtype-origin of the RT enzymes employed. These findings confirm that the mechanism involved is template-specific and RT-independent. In addition, a pattern of DNA synthesis characteristic of site-specific primer/template slippage and dislocation was only observed with the subtype C sequence. Analysis of RNA secondary structure suggested that the latter was unlikely to impact on K65R development between subtypes and that Streisinger strand slippage during DNA synthesis at the homopolymeric nucleotide stretch of the subtype C K65 region might occur, resulting in misalignment of the primer and template. Consequently, slippage would lead to a deletion of the middle adenine of codon K65 and the production of a -1 frameshift mutation, which upon dislocation and realignment of the primer and template, would lead to development of the K65R mutation. These findings provide additional mechanistic evidence for the facilitated development of the K65R mutation in subtype C HIV-1.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3105016?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT dimitrioscoutsinos atemplatedependentdislocationmechanismpotentiatesk65rreversetranscriptasemutationdevelopmentinsubtypecvariantsofhiv1
AT cedricfinvernizzi atemplatedependentdislocationmechanismpotentiatesk65rreversetranscriptasemutationdevelopmentinsubtypecvariantsofhiv1
AT danielamoisi atemplatedependentdislocationmechanismpotentiatesk65rreversetranscriptasemutationdevelopmentinsubtypecvariantsofhiv1
AT maureenoliveira atemplatedependentdislocationmechanismpotentiatesk65rreversetranscriptasemutationdevelopmentinsubtypecvariantsofhiv1
AT jorgelmartinezcajas atemplatedependentdislocationmechanismpotentiatesk65rreversetranscriptasemutationdevelopmentinsubtypecvariantsofhiv1
AT blumagbrenner atemplatedependentdislocationmechanismpotentiatesk65rreversetranscriptasemutationdevelopmentinsubtypecvariantsofhiv1
AT markawainberg atemplatedependentdislocationmechanismpotentiatesk65rreversetranscriptasemutationdevelopmentinsubtypecvariantsofhiv1
AT dimitrioscoutsinos templatedependentdislocationmechanismpotentiatesk65rreversetranscriptasemutationdevelopmentinsubtypecvariantsofhiv1
AT cedricfinvernizzi templatedependentdislocationmechanismpotentiatesk65rreversetranscriptasemutationdevelopmentinsubtypecvariantsofhiv1
AT danielamoisi templatedependentdislocationmechanismpotentiatesk65rreversetranscriptasemutationdevelopmentinsubtypecvariantsofhiv1
AT maureenoliveira templatedependentdislocationmechanismpotentiatesk65rreversetranscriptasemutationdevelopmentinsubtypecvariantsofhiv1
AT jorgelmartinezcajas templatedependentdislocationmechanismpotentiatesk65rreversetranscriptasemutationdevelopmentinsubtypecvariantsofhiv1
AT blumagbrenner templatedependentdislocationmechanismpotentiatesk65rreversetranscriptasemutationdevelopmentinsubtypecvariantsofhiv1
AT markawainberg templatedependentdislocationmechanismpotentiatesk65rreversetranscriptasemutationdevelopmentinsubtypecvariantsofhiv1
_version_ 1725018078508482560