| Literature DB >> 18638397 |
Leon Caly1, Nitin K Saksena, Sabine C Piller, David A Jans.
Abstract
We previously reported an epidemiologically linked HIV-1 infected patient cohort in which a long-term non-progressor (LTNP) infected two recipients who then exhibited normal disease progression. Expression of patient-derived vpr sequences from each of the three cohort members in mammalian cells tagged with GFP revealed a significant reduction in Vpr nuclear import and virion incorporation uniquely from the LTNP, whereas Vpr from the two progressing recipients displayed normal localisation and virion incorporation, implying a link between efficient Vpr nuclear import and HIV disease progression. Importantly, an F72L point mutation in the LTNP was identified for the first time as being uniquely responsible for decreased Vpr nuclear import.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18638397 PMCID: PMC2515335 DOI: 10.1186/1742-4690-5-67
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Retrovirology ISSN: 1742-4690 Impact factor: 4.602
Figure 1Late-stage LTNP-derived GFP-Vpr samples show decreased levels of nuclear accumulation compared to wildtype Vpr and progressing donors B and C. (A) HeLa cells were transfected with indicated GFP-Vpr constructs using Lipofectamine 2000™ with confocal images obtained 14 hours later using an Olympus FV1000 CLSM. (B) Analysis of CLSM images (as per A) with ImageJ was performed to determine the Fn/c. As a whole, late-stage samples from patient A (A6-2, A6-3, A6-4) and the Vpr (F72L) point mutant displayed significantly (p < 0.0001) reduced Fn/c ratios compared to wildtype Vpr. (C) Sequence analysis of patient-derived vpr sequences identifies F72L substitution mutation (as indicated) uniquely within all GFP-Vpr constructs with reduced nuclear accumulation.
Figure 2F72L-containing GFP-Vpr proteins fail to incorporate into forming virions, which show decreased infectivity of non-dividing MAGI (Multinuclear Activation of a Galactosidase Indicator) cells correlating with reduced importin-β3 binding. (A) Virus was derived from 293T cells cotransfected with pEPI-GFP-Vpr and proviral plasmid pUC18-NL4.3 and subjected to Western blot analysis, revealing the absence of GFP-Vpr protein in F72L containing samples. Control staining for p24 capsid protein indicates the presence of virus in all samples (*denotes lack of virion incorporation). (B) Virus derived from 293T cells cotransfected with the ΔVpr pro-viral plasmid pUC18-NL4.3(FS) and pEPI-GFP-Vpr (1–96, A6-2, A6-3 or F72L) was purified, normalized using an RT assay and used to infect growth arrested (γ-irradiated, 2 cycles at 30 Gy) MAGI (CD4+, integrated HIV-1-LTR-β-gal) cells. 48 hours post infection cells were fixed (1% formaldehyde/0.2% glutaraldehyde/PBS), stained (4 mM potassium ferricyanide, 4 mM potassium ferrocyanide, 2 mM MgCl2, 0.4 mg/ml 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-β-D-galactopyranoside [X-gal]) and scored for viral infectivity. Infected cells display X-gal stained (blue) nuclei due to expression of the early HIV protein Tat, which binds the HIV-LTR promoter of the integrated β-gal gene, resulting in expression of the β-gal protein. Non-infected cells remain colourless due to the lack of Tat expression and subsequent activation of the β-gal gene. Data presented depicts relative levels of infectivity (% +/- SEM) compared to wildtype Vpr1–96. Virus derived from F72L-cotransfected 293T cells displayed a significant (p < 0.0001) 5-fold reduction in viral infectivity of non-dividing cells compared to wildtype Vpr1–96. (C) Native PAGE gel-shift mobility assay; 2 μM GFP-Vpr1–96 or GFP alone was incubated with 10 μM importin-α2, -β1, -α2/β1 or -β3 as indicated. (D) Native PAGE gel-shift mobility titration assay; (i) 2 μM GFP-Vpr1–96 or GFP-VprF72L was incubated with increasing concentrations of Importin-β3 protein as indicated. (ii) Fluorimetric analysis of gel-shift assays from D(i), was performed as per [39] with the binding curves generated used to calculate dissociation constants (Kd). (E)i Typical CLSM images of fixed COS-7 cells expressing the indicated GFP-fusion proteins alone or in the context of c-myc-tagged-human Importin-β3. Cells were permeabilised and stained 14 hours post transfection with anti-c-myc antibody (Sigma) and visualized with Alexa-Fluo-568 (Molecular Probes). (E)ii Analysis of CLSM images (as per E(i)) with ImageJ was performed to determine the Fn/c. Exogenous Importin-β3 was found to significantly (p = 0.0378) increase the nuclear accumulation of wildtype GFP-Vpr1–96, but not that of GFP-VprF72L or F72L containing GFP-VprA6-3.