Derivation and characterization of an HIV-1 mutant that rescues IP6 binding deficiency

Abstract Background A critical step in the HIV-1 replication cycle is the assembly of Gag proteins to form virions at the plasma membrane. Virion assembly and maturation are facilitated by the cellular polyanion inositol hexaphosphate (IP6), which is proposed to stabilize both the immature Gag latti...

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Main Authors: Daniel Poston, Trinity Zang, Paul Bieniasz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-08-01
Series:Retrovirology
Subjects:
IP6
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12977-021-00571-3
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spelling doaj-adf5a4becd994d749f1e79b7397feec32021-08-29T11:42:27ZengBMCRetrovirology1742-46902021-08-0118111410.1186/s12977-021-00571-3Derivation and characterization of an HIV-1 mutant that rescues IP6 binding deficiencyDaniel Poston0Trinity Zang1Paul Bieniasz2Laboratory of Retrovirology, The Rockefeller UniversityLaboratory of Retrovirology, The Rockefeller UniversityLaboratory of Retrovirology, The Rockefeller UniversityAbstract Background A critical step in the HIV-1 replication cycle is the assembly of Gag proteins to form virions at the plasma membrane. Virion assembly and maturation are facilitated by the cellular polyanion inositol hexaphosphate (IP6), which is proposed to stabilize both the immature Gag lattice and the mature capsid lattice by binding to rings of primary amines at the center of Gag or capsid protein (CA) hexamers. The amino acids comprising these rings are critical for proper virion formation and their substitution results in assembly deficits or impaired infectiousness. To better understand the nature of the deficits that accompany IP6 binding deficiency, we passaged HIV-1 mutants that had substitutions in IP6 coordinating residues to select for compensatory mutations. Results We found a mutation, a threonine to isoleucine substitution at position 371 (T371I) in Gag, that restored replication competence to an IP6-binding-deficient HIV-1 mutant. Notably, unlike wild-type HIV-1, the assembly and infectiousness of resulting virus was not impaired when IP6 biosynthetic enzymes were genetically ablated. Surprisingly, we also found that the maturation inhibitor Bevirimat (BVM) could restore the assembly and replication of an IP6-binding deficient mutant. Moreover, using BVM-dependent mutants we were able to image BVM-induced assembly of individual HIV-1 particles assembly in living cells. Conclusions Overall these results suggest that IP6-Gag and Gag-Gag contacts are finely tuned to generate a Gag lattice of optimal stability, and that under certain conditions BVM can rescue IP6 deficiency. Additionally, our work identifies an inducible virion assembly system that can be utilized to visualize HIV-1 assembly events using live cell microscopy.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12977-021-00571-3HIV-1IP6Inositol phosphateHIV-1 assemblyImaging
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniel Poston
Trinity Zang
Paul Bieniasz
spellingShingle Daniel Poston
Trinity Zang
Paul Bieniasz
Derivation and characterization of an HIV-1 mutant that rescues IP6 binding deficiency
Retrovirology
HIV-1
IP6
Inositol phosphate
HIV-1 assembly
Imaging
author_facet Daniel Poston
Trinity Zang
Paul Bieniasz
author_sort Daniel Poston
title Derivation and characterization of an HIV-1 mutant that rescues IP6 binding deficiency
title_short Derivation and characterization of an HIV-1 mutant that rescues IP6 binding deficiency
title_full Derivation and characterization of an HIV-1 mutant that rescues IP6 binding deficiency
title_fullStr Derivation and characterization of an HIV-1 mutant that rescues IP6 binding deficiency
title_full_unstemmed Derivation and characterization of an HIV-1 mutant that rescues IP6 binding deficiency
title_sort derivation and characterization of an hiv-1 mutant that rescues ip6 binding deficiency
publisher BMC
series Retrovirology
issn 1742-4690
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Abstract Background A critical step in the HIV-1 replication cycle is the assembly of Gag proteins to form virions at the plasma membrane. Virion assembly and maturation are facilitated by the cellular polyanion inositol hexaphosphate (IP6), which is proposed to stabilize both the immature Gag lattice and the mature capsid lattice by binding to rings of primary amines at the center of Gag or capsid protein (CA) hexamers. The amino acids comprising these rings are critical for proper virion formation and their substitution results in assembly deficits or impaired infectiousness. To better understand the nature of the deficits that accompany IP6 binding deficiency, we passaged HIV-1 mutants that had substitutions in IP6 coordinating residues to select for compensatory mutations. Results We found a mutation, a threonine to isoleucine substitution at position 371 (T371I) in Gag, that restored replication competence to an IP6-binding-deficient HIV-1 mutant. Notably, unlike wild-type HIV-1, the assembly and infectiousness of resulting virus was not impaired when IP6 biosynthetic enzymes were genetically ablated. Surprisingly, we also found that the maturation inhibitor Bevirimat (BVM) could restore the assembly and replication of an IP6-binding deficient mutant. Moreover, using BVM-dependent mutants we were able to image BVM-induced assembly of individual HIV-1 particles assembly in living cells. Conclusions Overall these results suggest that IP6-Gag and Gag-Gag contacts are finely tuned to generate a Gag lattice of optimal stability, and that under certain conditions BVM can rescue IP6 deficiency. Additionally, our work identifies an inducible virion assembly system that can be utilized to visualize HIV-1 assembly events using live cell microscopy.
topic HIV-1
IP6
Inositol phosphate
HIV-1 assembly
Imaging
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12977-021-00571-3
work_keys_str_mv AT danielposton derivationandcharacterizationofanhiv1mutantthatrescuesip6bindingdeficiency
AT trinityzang derivationandcharacterizationofanhiv1mutantthatrescuesip6bindingdeficiency
AT paulbieniasz derivationandcharacterizationofanhiv1mutantthatrescuesip6bindingdeficiency
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