Role of Phosphorylation in the Nuclear Biology of HIV-1

被引:0
|
作者
Francis, A. C. [1 ]
Di Primio, C. [2 ]
Allouch, A. [2 ]
Cereseto, A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Trento, Mol Virol Lab, CIBIO, Trento, Italy
[2] Scuola Normale Super Pisa, Mol Biol Lab, Pisa, Italy
关键词
Capsid; HIV-1; Integrase; Kinases; Nucleus; Phosphorylation; Matrix; Rev; Tat; Vpr; HUMAN-IMMUNODEFICIENCY-VIRUS; CARBOXYL-TERMINAL DOMAIN; VIRAL MATRIX PROTEIN; RETROVIRAL DNA INTEGRATION; TYPE-1 VPR PROTEIN; CELL-CYCLE ARREST; NONDIVIDING CELLS; REV PROTEIN; RNA-POLYMERASE; LOCALIZATION SIGNAL;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
The central events of HIV-1 life cycle occur at the nuclear level where the viral genome is integrated into the host cellular DNA in order to be expressed and replicated. The viral pre-integration complexes (PICs) are actively transported in the nuclear compartment where integration occurs in specific regions of the cellular chromatin. Similar to all viruses, HIV-1 encodes for a limited number of proteins that are insufficient to produce new viral progenies. Several cellular pathways are thus hijacked by HIV-1 to efficiently complete the replication cycle. The majority of viral proteins are substrates for cellular kinases indicating a pivotal role of these cellular enzymes at multiple steps of the HIV-1 life cycle. The nuclear biology of the cell is highly controlled by kinases (nuclear transport, DNA replication, repair and transcription) and many of these kinases also sustain the viral nuclear events. This review summarizes our current knowledge on kinases that are involved in HIV-1 replication cycle at the nuclear level, both directly through their catalytic activity on viral proteins and indirectly being activated by the virus. Among viral proteins directly modified by kinases is integrase (IN) the factor that catalyzes the integration of HIV-1 in the cellular genome. Notably, this recent discovery may shed light onto mechanisms underlying the different susceptibility of the main cell types targeted by HIV-1 (CD-4+ T-cell) depending on their activation status. Alternatively, kinases may act indirectly such as in the case of DNA repair factors activated following HIV-1 infection and demonstrated to regulate the viral life cycle. Finally, inhibition of cellular kinases interacting with HIV-1 at the nuclear level has been shown to severely affect the viral replication cycle, thus suggesting potential new therapeutic approaches.
引用
收藏
页码:2904 / 2912
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] HIV-1 IN Inhibitors: 2010 Update and Perspectives
    Marchand, Christophe
    Maddali, Kasthuraiah
    Metifiot, Mathieu
    Pommier, Yves
    CURRENT TOPICS IN MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY, 2009, 9 (11) : 1016 - 1037
  • [32] Transportin 3 and importin α are required for effective nuclear import of HIV-1 integrase in virus-infected cells
    Levin, Aviad
    Hayouka, Zvi
    Friedler, Assaf
    Loyter, Abraham
    NUCLEUS, 2010, 1 (05) : 422 - 431
  • [33] Sam68 functions in nuclear export and translation of HIV-1 RNA
    He, Johnny J.
    Henao-Mejia, Jorge
    Liu, Ying
    RNA BIOLOGY, 2009, 6 (04) : 384 - 386
  • [34] Direct Capsid Labeling of Infectious HIV-1 by Genetic Code Expansion Allows Detection of Largely Complete Nuclear Capsids and Suggests Nuclear Entry of HIV-1 Complexes via Common Routes
    Schifferdecker, Sandra
    Zila, Vojtech
    Mueller, Thorsten G.
    Sakin, Volkan
    Anders-Oesswein, Maria
    Laketa, Vibor
    Kraeusslich, Hans-Georg
    Mueller, Barbara
    MBIO, 2022, 13 (05):
  • [35] Flexible Use of Nuclear Import Pathways by HIV-1
    Lee, KyeongEun
    Ambrose, Zandrea
    Martin, Thomas D.
    Oztop, Ilker
    Mulky, Alok
    Julias, John G.
    Vandegraaff, Nick
    Baumann, Joerg G.
    Wang, Rui
    Yuen, Wendy
    Takemura, Taichiro
    Shelton, Kenneth
    Taniuchi, Ichiro
    Li, Yuan
    Sodroski, Joseph
    Littman, Dan R.
    Coffin, John M.
    Hughes, Stephen H.
    Unutmaz, Derya
    Engelman, Alan
    KewalRamani, Vineet N.
    CELL HOST & MICROBE, 2010, 7 (03) : 221 - 233
  • [36] HIV-1 Tat: Role in Bystander Toxicity
    Ajasin, David
    Eugenin, Eliseo A.
    FRONTIERS IN CELLULAR AND INFECTION MICROBIOLOGY, 2020, 10
  • [37] Role of RNA helicases in HIV-1 replication
    Jeang, Kuan-Teh
    Yedavalli, Venkat
    NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, 2006, 34 (15) : 4198 - 4205
  • [38] Functional role of Alix in HIV-1 replication
    Fujii, Ken
    Munshi, Utpal M.
    Ablan, Sherimay D.
    Demirov, Dimiter G.
    Soheilian, Ferri
    Nagashima, Kunio
    Stephen, Andrew G.
    Fisher, Robert J.
    Freed, Eric O.
    VIROLOGY, 2009, 391 (02) : 284 - 292
  • [39] The Role of Macrophages in HIV-1 Persistence and Pathogenesis
    Kruize, Zita
    Kootstra, Neeltje A.
    FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY, 2019, 10
  • [40] Role of HIV-1 nucleocapsid protein in HIV-1 reverse transcription
    Levin, Judith G.
    Mitra, Mithun
    Mascarenhas, Anjali
    Musier-Forsyth, Karin
    RNA BIOLOGY, 2010, 7 (06) : 754 - 774