Conditional activation of an HIV-1 protease attenuated mutant by a leucine zipper dimerization motif

Virus Res. 2021 Apr 2:295:198258. doi: 10.1016/j.virusres.2020.198258. Epub 2020 Dec 11.

Abstract

Mature HIV-1 protease (PR) functions as a dimer. Changes in HIV-1 PR activation can block virus assembly via premature or enhanced Gag cleavage. HIV-1 PR precursor contains N terminal-linked p6*, a possible modulating factor in PR activation. We found that p6* replacement with a leucine zipper (LZ) dimerization motif (creating a DWzPR construct) or an LZ insertion at the PR C-terminus significantly reduced virus yields due to enhanced Gag cleavage, suggesting that an LZ insertion promotes PR activation by facilitating PR dimer formation. However, introducing T26S (a PR activity-attenuated mutation) into DWzPR strongly impaired Gag cleavage, except when the native C-terminal p6* tetrapeptide remained at the LZ/PR junction. LZ insertion at the PR C-terminus still strongly enhanced PR T26S Gag cleavage. Our data suggest that in addition to p6* mutations, a single amino acid substitution within PR can impair PR activation, likely due to conformational changes triggered by the PR precursor.

Keywords: Gag cleavage; Gag-Pol; HIV-1; Leucine zipper; Protease activation; Virus maturation; p6pol.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Dimerization
  • HIV Protease* / chemistry
  • HIV Protease* / genetics
  • HIV-1* / physiology
  • Leucine Zippers*
  • gag Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus / genetics
  • gag Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus / metabolism

Substances

  • gag Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus
  • HIV Protease
  • p16 protease, Human immunodeficiency virus 1