Literature DB >> 21576478

HIV DNA is heavily uracilated, which protects it from autointegration.

Nan Yan1, Elizabeth O'Day, Lee Adam Wheeler, Alan Engelman, Judy Lieberman.   

Abstract

Human immune cells infected by HIV naturally contain high uracil content, and HIV reverse transcriptase (RT) does not distinguish between dUTP and dTTP. Many DNA viruses and retroviruses encode a dUTPase or uracil-DNA glycosylase (UNG) to counteract uracil incorporation. However, although HIV virions are thought to contain cellular UNG2, replication of HIV produced in cells lacking UNG activity does not appear to be impaired. Here we show that HIV reverse transcripts generated in primary human immune cells are heavily uracilated (>500 uracils per 10 kb HIV genome). We find that HIV DNA uracilation, rather than being dangerous, may promote the early phase of the viral life cycle. Shortly after reverse transcription, the ends of the HIV DNA are activated by the viral integrase (IN) in preparation for chromosomal insertion. However, the activated ends can attack the viral DNA itself in a suicidal side pathway, called autointegration. We find here that uracilation of target DNA inhibits the strand transfer of HIV DNA ends by IN, thereby inhibiting autointegration and facilitating chromosomal integration and viral replication. When uracilation is increased by incubating uracil-poor cells in the presence of increasing concentrations of dUTP or by infecting with virus that contains the cytosine deaminase APOBEC3G (A3G), the proportion of reverse transcripts that undergo suicidal autointegration decreases. Thus, HIV tolerates, or even benefits from, nonmutagenic uracil incorporation during reverse transcription in human immune cells.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21576478      PMCID: PMC3107311          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1102943108

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  47 in total

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5.  Retroviral intasome assembly and inhibition of DNA strand transfer.

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6.  A one-step method for quantitative determination of uracil in DNA by real-time PCR.

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10.  APOBEC3G inhibits elongation of HIV-1 reverse transcripts.

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Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2015-10-01       Impact factor: 16.971

3.  Deoxyuridine in DNA has an inhibitory and promutagenic effect on RNA transcription by diverse RNA polymerases.

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Review 4.  HIV Genome-Wide Protein Associations: a Review of 30 Years of Research.

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7.  The DDB1-DCAF1-Vpr-UNG2 crystal structure reveals how HIV-1 Vpr steers human UNG2 toward destruction.

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9.  Uracil DNA glycosylase initiates degradation of HIV-1 cDNA containing misincorporated dUTP and prevents viral integration.

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10.  Identification of regulators of the innate immune response to cytosolic DNA and retroviral infection by an integrative approach.

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