| Literature DB >> 28754126 |
Julien Matysiak1,2, Paul Lesbats1,2, Eric Mauro1,2, Delphine Lapaillerie1,2,3, Jean-William Dupuy4, Angelica P Lopez5, Mohamed Salah Benleulmi1,2,3, Christina Calmels1,2,3, Marie-Line Andreola1,2,3, Marc Ruff6, Manuel Llano5, Olivier Delelis7,3, Marc Lavigne8,9,3, Vincent Parissi10,11,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Insertion of retroviral genome DNA occurs in the chromatin of the host cell. This step is modulated by chromatin structure as nucleosomes compaction was shown to prevent HIV-1 integration and chromatin remodeling has been reported to affect integration efficiency. LEDGF/p75-mediated targeting of the integration complex toward RNA polymerase II (polII) transcribed regions ensures optimal access to dynamic regions that are suitable for integration. Consequently, we have investigated the involvement of polII-associated factors in the regulation of HIV-1 integration.Entities:
Keywords: Chromatin; FACT; HIV-1; Integrase; Nucleosome; Retroviral integration
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28754126 PMCID: PMC5534098 DOI: 10.1186/s12977-017-0363-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Retrovirology ISSN: 1742-4690 Impact factor: 4.602
Fig. 1Interaction between HIV-1 IN, LEDGF/p75 and FACT complex. A Schematic representation of the previously reported interactions between HIV-1 IN, LEDGF/p75 and FACT complex is shown in a. IN/FACT, IN/LEDGF, LEDGF/FACT, IN/LEDGF/FACT and IN/IBD/FACT interactions were analyzed by co-immunoprecipitation using recombinant cofactors and polyclonal anti-HIV-1 IN antibodies. IBD/FACT interactions were analyzed by GST-pull down using IBD-GST and FACT recombinant proteins. The interactions were monitored either direct gel staining using colloidal blue or western blot using the corresponding antibodies and quantified by Image J software (see quantification in b and representative experiments in Additional file 3: Figure S3). All values are shown as the mean ± standard deviation (error bars) of at least three independent sets of experiments. The p-values were calculated by Student’s t test and are shown as *p < 0.05 and **p < 0.005 to represent the probability of obtaining significant differences compared with the data obtained with the negative background obtained with the beads alone. Cellular interaction between SSRP1, LEDGF/p75 and IN was checked by immunoprecipitation with an anti-FLAG antibodies in cells lysates obtained from LEDGF/p75-deficient cells (si1340/1428 cells) and transfected with plasmid expressing SSRP1-Myc and HIV-1 IN-Myc, and either FLAG-LEDGF/p75 (lane 1) or an empty plasmid (lane 2) (c). Then, immunoprecipitated proteins were evaluated for the presence of the expressed proteins by immunoblotting with tag-specific antibodies. (**) represents a longer exposure of (*). Detection of light chain Igs were used as loading control. The experiment was performed twice with identical results
Selection of cellular interact ants of the IN•viral DNA complex
| Protein name | Protein family | Protein complex | Accession number | Number of peptide |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Transcription | PolII | O75475 | 4 |
|
| Protein chaperone | Prefoldin PFD | F5H2A7 | 12 |
|
| Transcription | SWI/SNF | B5MC5 | 3 |
|
| DNA binding/chromatin | – | O75531 | 2 |
|
| DNA repair | – | P39748 | 15 |
|
| DNA repair | – | Q06609 | 7 |
| SSRP1 | Histone chaperone | FACT | E9PPZ7 | 10 |
| SPT16 | Histone chaperone | FACT | Q9Y5B9 | 31 |
| IWS1 | Transcription | PolII | E7EX51 | 2 |
| SMARCC1 (BAF155) | Transcription | SWI/SNF | Q92922 | 2 |
| SMARCD1 (BAF60) | Transcription | SWI/SNF | Q96GM5 | 2 |
Cellular extracts from HeLa P4 cells were incubated with streptavidin beads coupled to fraction enriched in active IN•viral DNA complexes as shown in SI. The elution of the interacting proteins was loaded on 1256 SDS-PAGE gel stained with silver nitrate and the bands were excised from gel and submitted to electroelution. The selected proteins were identified by MS–MS. A list of proteins found only associated to IN•viral DNA complexes but not to control DNA alone and linked to chromatin or transcription is provided here. The number of peptides identified per protein is also reported. Selected proteins previously reported as playing a role in retroviral integration are underlined
Fig. 2Effect of FACT complex on in vitro HIV-1 integration. A concerted integration assay was performed using 200 nM of HIV-1 IN, 10 ng of donor DNA, 50 ng of p5S naked or chromatinized plasmid DNA (PN DNA), and increasing concentrations of FACT complex. The reaction products were loaded onto 1% agarose gels, and a representative set of experiments performed with the wild-type integrase is reported in (a). The positions and structures of the donor substrate and the different half-site (HSI), full-site (FSI) and donor/donor integration (d/d) products are shown. Quantification of the total integration products (FSI, HSI and donor/donor) was performed via gel detection and is reported in (b) as the percentage relative to activity without FACT. Effect of FACT complex or SSRP1 or Spt16 proteins [optimal FACT concentration as determined in (b)] on integration into PN DNA was analyzed and integration efficiency was reported in (c). Effect of FACT nucleosome remodeling activity on integration catalyzed by HIV-1 IN on chromatinized substrates was analyzed by comparing chromatinized p5S vector (histone/DNA ratio = 1) treated with UV or untreated as reported in “Methods” section. The treated or untreated substrates were then used in concerted integration assays without FACT or with increasing concentrations of the complex. Quantification of the total integration products detected on gel (see representative experiment in Additional file 4: Figure S4) (FSI, HSI and donor/donor) was performed via gel detection and is reported in (d) as the percentage relative to activity detected on naked DNA (pre-normalized data obtained in the control experiments using naked DNA and without FACT are also reported as the percentage of integrated substrate). All values are shown as the mean ± standard deviation (error bars) of at least three independent sets of experiments
Fig. 3Effect of LEDGF/p75 on FACT-mediated stimulation of in vitro HIV-1 integration. Concerted integration assays were performed as done in Fig. 2 but using IN•LEDGF complex, naked or chromatinized acceptor DNA and increasing concentrations of FACT (a). Results are reported as the percentage relative to activity detected on naked DNA without FACT and pre-normalized data obtained in the control experiments using naked DNA and without FACT are reported as the percentage of integrated substrate. Results obtained with full length LEDGF/p75 or the LEDGF 326–471 IBD-GST domains are reported in (b). All values are shown as the mean ± standard deviation (error bars) of at least three independent sets of experiments. The p-values were calculated by Student’s t-test and are shown as *p < 0.05 and **p < 0.005 to represent the probability of obtaining significant differences compared with control experiments performed with PN DNA without FACT
Fig. 4Integration catalyzed by HIV-1 integrase onto dissociated nucleosomes in vitro. A concerted integration assay was performed using 200 nM of HIV-1 IN, 10 ng of donor DNA, 50 ng of p601 naked or p601 plasmid chromatinized either using native histone octamers (PN Oct) or H3/H4 tetramers (PN Tet) with increasing histone/DNA ratio as reported. Typical experiment is shown in (a) and quantification of the integration products is reported in (b). Results are reported as the percentage relative to activity detected on naked DNA and pre-normalized data obtained in the control experiments using naked DNA and without FACT are reported as the percentage of integrated substrate. Selectivity assays were performed under similar conditions except that a mixture of naked p5S and either p601 assembled with native octamers was used (c) or H3/H4 tetramers (d). Quantification of the integration products detected in each vector is reported as percentage of the total integration. All values are shown as the mean ± standard deviation (error bars) of at least three independent sets of experiments. The p-values were calculated by Student’s t-test and are shown as *p < 0.05 and **p < 0.005 to represent the probability of obtaining significant differences compared with untreated conditions
Fig. 5Effect of nucleosome dissociation on integration catalyzed by HIV-1 and PFV integrases in vitro. Concerted integration assays were performed using either HIV-1 or PFV INs under similar conditions and using p601 vectors naked (lanes 1 and 4) or chromatinized with native histone octamers or H3/H4 tetramers with increasing histone/DNA ratios (lanes 2 and 5, 1.1 ratio; lanes 3 and 6, 1.2 ratio). Typical experiment is shown in (a) and quantification of the integration products is reported in (b). Comparison of the integration catalyzed by HIV-1 or PFV IN on naked and p601 vectors assembled with histone octamers or tetramers is shown in (c). Results are reported as the percentage relative to activity detected on naked DNA without FACT and pre-normalized data obtained in the control experiments using naked DNA are reported as the percentage of integrated substrate. Comparison of the effect of FACT on HIV-1 and PFV integration catalyzed on p601 chromatinized with histone octamers is shown in (d). All values are shown as the mean ± standard deviation (error bars) of at least three independent sets of experiments. The p-values were calculated by Student’s t-test and are shown as *p < 0.05 and **p < 0.005 to represent the probability of obtaining significant differences compared with untreated conditions
Fig. 6Effect of FACT-mediated chromatin remodeling chemical promotion on early steps of HIV-1 LAI virus and derived lentiviral vectors. HeLa P4 and HEK293T cells were treated with CBLC137 curaxin 6 h before cell infection with LAI wild type virus or transduction with lentiviral vectors. The structure of the CBLC137 drug is shown in (a) as well as its effect on FACT. CDLC137 binds to nucleosomal DNA and forms structures with high FACT affinity leading to the trapping of the complex into dissociated nucleosomes, preventing its histone chaperone activity and enhancing the histone dissociation [32, 33]. This induces a global increase in chromatin accessibility that was evaluated by FAIRE (data obtained in HEK293T cells are reported in b). The effect on LAI virus replication was evaluated by quantifying the LTR-dependent β-galactodisase expression (c) and viral DNA populations at 0–48 h post-transduction (see 24 and 48 h time points in d and full time course analysis in Additional file 6: Figure S6). Early steps of lentiviral vector replication were evaluated by quantifying GFP-positive HEK293T cells (e) and viral DNA populations at 0–48 h post-transduction (see 24 and 48 h time points in f and full time course analysis in Additional file 6: Figure S6). Quantification of the viral DNA populations were done after optimal 0.1 µM curaxins treatment. All values are shown as the mean ± standard deviation (error bars) of at least three independent sets of experiments. The p-values were calculated by Student’s t-test and are shown as *p < 0.05 and **p < 0.005 to represent the probability of obtaining significant differences compared with untreated conditions
Fig. 7Effect of FACT knock down on early steps of HIV-1 derived lentiviral vectors in HEK293T cells. SSRP1 encoding gene knock down was conducted essentially as previously described [31] by performing two successive siRNA transfections (see “Methods” section). The amount of SSRP1 protein monitored by western blotting is reported in (a). This method allowed us to achieve more than 80% of apparent SSRP1 extinction. After knock down, FAIRE analyses were performed as indicated in “Methods” section and the results obtained in cells depleted for SSRP1 are reported in (b). The early steps of replication of lentiviral vectors carrying the GFP encoding gene were determined by measuring GFP-positive cells with flux cytometry (c) and quantification of the viral DNA populations at 0–48 h post-transduction using quantitative PCR (data obtained after a 20 nM siRNA treatment are reported in d for the 24 and 48 h time points, see full time course analysis in Additional file 7: Figure S7). Data obtained with the interferin transfector agent alone and control siRNA are also reported in the figure. All values are shown as the mean ± standard deviation (error bars) of four independent sets of experiments. The p-values were calculated by Student’s t-test and are shown as *p < 0.05 and **p < 0.005 to represent the probability of obtaining significant differences compared with untreated conditions
Fig. 8Effect of FACT-mediated chromatin remodeling chemical promotion on early steps of HIV-1 in LEDGF/p75 knock-out context and on PFV infectivity. Similar experiments than described in Fig. 7 were performed in TZM and TZM knock out for LEDGF/p75 (a, b) or in HEK293T cells transduced either with HIV-1 or PFV vectors (c). The effect on the early steps of lentiviral vector replication was evaluated by quantifying GFP-positive cells. All values are shown as the mean ± standard deviation (error bars) of at least three independent sets of experiments. The p-values were calculated by Student’s t-test and are shown as *p < 0.05 and **p < 0.005 to represent the probability of obtaining significant differences compared with untreated conditions
Fig. 9Model for FACT action on HIV-1 integration steps. HIV-1 intasomes are targeted to the PolII-transcribed region of the chromatin thanks to the association of IN with LEDGF/p75 and binding to H3K36me3. In these regions the FACT complex and LEDGF/p75 are both enriched owing to the LEDGF/p75 and SSRP1 interaction. Chromatin remodeling mediated by FACT occurring in the vicinity of the targeted region may generate partially dissociated nucleosomes leading to chromatin structures that are preferential substrates for both RNA transcription and HIV-1 integration. FACT action on chromatin at the vicinity of the integration sites may lead to increased accessibility to nucleosomal DNA as well as histone tails. Integration could then occur efficiently on partially dissociated nucleosome or accessible native nucleosome. Further FACT-mediated regulation of the viral genes transcription can then occur. The expected effect of curaxin treatment on HIV-1 and PFV integration is reported on the basis of the drugs effect on FACT chromatin remodeling activity and on the retroviruses preferences for open or compact chromatin structure