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Journal of Virology, August 2001, p. 7230-7243, Vol. 75, No. 16
0022-538X/01/$04.00+0   DOI: 10.1128/JVI.75.16.7230-7243.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.

Hydrophobic Amino Acids in the Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 p2 and Nucleocapsid Proteins Can Contribute to the Rescue of Deleted Viral RNA Packaging Signals

Liwei Rong,1,2 Rodney S. Russell,1,3 Jing Hu,1 Yongjun Guan,1 Lawrence Kleiman,1,3 Chen Liang,1,2,* and Mark A. Wainberg1,2,3,*

McGill AIDS Centre, Lady Davis Institute-Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3T 1E2,1 and Departments of Medicine2 and Microbiology and Immunology,3 McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3A 2B4

Received 28 February 2001/Accepted 27 April 2001

An RNA fragment of 75 nucleotides, which is located between the primer binding site and the 5' major splice donor site in human immunodeficiency virus type 1, has been shown to participate in specific encapsidation of viral RNA. Compensation studies have identified two second-site mutations, namely, MP2 (a T12I substitution in p2) and MNC (a T24I substitution in the nucleocapsid [NC] protein) that were involved in the rescue of various deletions in the aforementioned RNA region (i.e., BH-D1, BH-D2, and BH-LD3). To study whether the MP2 and MNC point mutations exert their compensatory effects in a cis manner, production of Gag proteins was blocked by insertion of stop codons into LD3, LD3-MP2-MNC, and wild-type BH10 such that the constructs generated, i.e., LD3-DG, LD3-MP2-MNC-DG, and BH-DG, only provided RNA transcripts for packaging. The results of cotransfection experiments showed that the LD3-MP2-MNC-DG viral RNA was packaged as inefficiently as LD3-DG; in contrast, BH-DG was efficiently packaged. Therefore, nucleotide substitutions in MP2 and MNC did not act in a cis manner to correct the packaging deficits in LD3. Next, we deliberately changed the T12 in p2 or the T24 in the NC to each of 19 other amino acids. We found that amino acids with long hydrophobic side chains, i.e., V, L, I, and M, were favored at either position 12 in p2 or at position 24 in NC to compensate for the above-mentioned deletions. Further studies showed that only a few amino acids could not be used at these two sites by the wild-type virus due to decreased RNA levels in the virion or abnormal Gag protein processing. In this case, W, D, and E could not substitute for T12 in p2, and S, D, and N could not substitute for T24 in NC, without affecting viral infectivity. Therefore, the long hydrophobic side chains of V, L, I, and M are necessary for these amino acids to rescue the BH-D1, BH-D2, and BH-LD3 mutated viruses.


* Corresponding author. Mailing address: McGill AIDS Centre, Lady Davis Institute-Jewish General Hospital, 3755 Cote Ste-Catherine Rd., Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3T 1E2. Phone: (514) 340-8260. Fax: (514) 340-7537. E-mail for Mark A. Wainberg: mdwa{at}musica.mcgill.ca. E-mail for Chen Liang: cliang{at}po-box.mcgill.ca.


Journal of Virology, August 2001, p. 7230-7243, Vol. 75, No. 16
0022-538X/01/$04.00+0   DOI: 10.1128/JVI.75.16.7230-7243.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.



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