| Literature DB >> 31652959 |
Helena Fabryova1, Klaus Strebel2.
Abstract
Vpr is a lentiviral accessory protein that is expressed late during the infection cycle and is packaged in significant quantities into virus particles through a specific interaction with the P6 domain of the viral Gag precursor. Characterization of the physiologically relevant function(s) of Vpr has been hampered by the fact that in many cell lines, deletion of Vpr does not significantly affect viral fitness. However, Vpr is critical for virus replication in primary macrophages and for viral pathogenesis in vivo. It is generally accepted that Vpr does not have a specific enzymatic activity but functions as a molecular adapter to modulate viral or cellular processes for the benefit of the virus. Indeed, many Vpr interacting factors have been described by now, and the goal of this review is to summarize our current knowledge of cellular proteins targeted by Vpr.Entities:
Keywords: HIV-1; Vpr; accessory genes; host restriction factors
Year: 2019 PMID: 31652959 PMCID: PMC6912716 DOI: 10.3390/cells8111310
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Lentiviral genome organization. Lentiviral genomes share significant similarities with respect to the location of the structural gag, pol, and env genes. However, they differ in number and type of accessory proteins. All but EIAV encode a vif gene, and all primate lentiviruses (i.e., human and simian immunodeficiency viruses) encode vpr and nef genes, whereas vpu and vpx genes are limited to HIV-1 and HIV-2 and related viruses, respectively. HIV = Human Immunodeficiency Virus, SIV = Simian Immunodeficiency Virus, EIAV = Equine Infectious Anemia Virus, CAEV = Caprine Arthritis Encephalitis Virus, JDV = Jembrana Disease Virus, BIV = Bovine Immunodeficiency Virus.
Figure 2Replication of wild type (WT) and Vpr-defective (Vpr(−) HIV-1 in various cell types. A3.01, Jurkat, H9, and CEM-SS are human CD4+ T cell lines that support the replication of X4-tropic HIV-1 (e.g., NL4-3). THP-1 is a human monocytic cell line and MDM are primary human monocyte-derived macrophages. Terminally differentiated MDM and differentiated THP-1 cells are susceptible to infection by R5-tropic HIV-1 (e.g., AD8). NL43wt, NL43vpr(−), AD8wt, and AD8vpr(−) virus stocks were prepared by transfecting corresponding molecular clones into HEK293T cells. Virus-containing supernatants were harvested 24 h after transfection, filtered, and concentrated by centrifugation through a 20% sucrose cushion. Pelleted viruses were suspended in RPMI medium, adjusted to equal reverse transcriptase activity and used to infect the above cell lines. Culture supernatants were collected for 14 days in 2–3-day intervals and virus-associated reverse transcriptase activity was determined and plotted as a function of time. We found that wild type and Vpr-defective NL43 viruses replicated with very similar kinetics in all four T cell lines tested (panels A–D) suggesting that Vpr is not critical for virus replication in these cells. In contrast, replication of Vpr-defective AD8 virus in THP-1 cells and in MDM was severely restricted (panels E,F) demonstrating the importance of Vpr for replication in these cells.
Vpr mutants and their functional phenotypes.
| Mutant | Effect | Citation |
|---|---|---|
|
| Associated with long-term non-progressor (LTNP) phenotype | [ |
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| Nucleoporin binding mutant, diffuse nucleocytoplasmic distribution, unable to cause G2/M arrest | [ |
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| Selectively disrupts Vpr binding to helicase-like transcription factor (HLTF) without disturbing the UNG2 degradation | [ |
|
| Nucleoporin binding mutant, diffuse nucleocytoplasmic distribution, no G2 arrest, no apoptosis induction, no accumulation at the nuclear envelope | [ |
|
| Unable to bind gag and package into particles | [ |
|
| Decreased Vpr incorporation into virions compared to WT Vpr | [ |
|
| Unable to interact with cyclophilin A | [ |
|
| Associated with RP phenotype | [ |
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| G2/M arrest defective mutant | [ |
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| Defective for UNG2 loading onto CRL4 but retains binding to DCAF | [ |
|
| Defective for HLTF degradation, ability to arrest cell cycle maintained | [ |
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| DCAF (also known as VprBP) binding mutant. | [ |
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| Associated with rapid progressor (RP) phenotype | [ |
|
| Nuclear export mutant | [ |
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| DCAF binding mutant, but associates with Exo1 like wild type Vpr | [ |
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| DCAF binding mutant, unable to induce G2/M cell cycle arrest | [ |
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| Decreased nuclear import of the virus; LTNP | [ |
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| G2/M arrest defective mutant with decreased apoptosis induction ability | [ |
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| Associated with LTNP phenotype, impaired induction of apoptosis | [ |
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| G2/M arrest defective mutant, unable to activate TAK1 | [ |
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| Decreased ability to cause cell cycle arrest | [ |
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| Associated with rapid disease progressor phenotype | [ |
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| Does not induce cell cycle arrest, no apoptosis, localizes to the nuclear envelope | [ |
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| Associated with LNTP phenotype | [ |
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| Impaired nuclear targeting by the virus | [ |
Figure 3Schematic structure of the CRL4DCAF1 E3 ubiquitin ligase complex assembled by Vpr for the ubiquitination and subsequent degradation of Vpr-interacting substrates (X). Binding of cellular factor X (e.g., HLTF, Exo1, Mus81, ZIP, Tet2, and other thus unidentified substrates) to Vpr induces its poly-ubiquitination through the Vpr-associated E3 ubiquitin ligase complex, which marks these proteins for subsequent degradation by the cellular proteasome machinery.
Table of Vpr interacting partners.
| Vpr interacting partner | Function | Citation |
|---|---|---|
|
| Part of the E3 ubiquitin ligase complex used by Vpr to degrade cellular targets | [ |
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| Involved in nuclear translocation of the preintegration complex | [ |
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| Binding to chromatin | [ |
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| a mitochondrial ATP/ADP antiporter, interaction with Vpr induces apoptosis | [ |
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| Enhancing virus replication | [ |
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| Permeabilization of mitochondrial membrane | [ |
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| Docking of Vpr at the nuclear envelope | [ |
|
| Controversial function in G2/M-arrest | Structure reported in [ |
|
| E3 ubiquitin ligase complex assembly | [ |
|
| Role in DNA repair, degraded by Vpr | [ |
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| Role in DNA repair, degraded by Vpr | [ |
|
| G2/M cell cycle arrest | [ |
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| UNG2 and SMUG1 initiate base excision repair mechanisms. | [ |
|
| Degraded by Vpr, interaction with DCAF, function unknown | [ |
|
| Possible function in G2/M arrest | [ |
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| Sustaining IL-6 expression in macrophages | [ |
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| G2/M arrest independent repair of DNA containing uracil residues | [ |
| Decrease of the mutation rate in HIV-1, packaging the uracil DNA glycosylase into viral particles, and hence, enabling replication in primary cells | [ |