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Journal of Virology, August 1999, p. 6670-6679, Vol. 73, No. 8
0022-538X/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Coupled Integration of Human Immunodeficiency Virus
Type 1 cDNA Ends by Purified Integrase In Vitro: Stimulation by the
Viral Nucleocapsid Protein
Sandrine
Carteau,1
Robert J.
Gorelick,2 and
Frederic D.
Bushman1,*
Infectious Disease Laboratory, Salk Institute, La Jolla,
California 92037,1 and AIDS Vaccine
Program, SAIC Frederick, National Cancer Institute, Frederick
Cancer Research and Development Center, Frederick, Maryland
217022
Received 11 February 1999/Accepted 30 April 1999
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ABSTRACT |
Integration of retroviral cDNA involves coupled joining of the two
ends of the viral genome at precisely spaced positions in the host cell
DNA. Correct coupled joining is essential for viral replication, as
shown, for example, by the finding that viral mutants defective in
coupled joining are defective in integration and replication. To date,
reactions with purified human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)
integrase protein in vitro have supported mainly uncoupled joining of
single cDNA ends. We have analyzed an activity stimulating coupled
joining present in HIV-1 virions, which led to the finding that the
HIV-1 nucleocapsid (NC) protein can stimulate coupled joining more than
1,000-fold under some conditions. The requirements for stimulating
coupled joining were investigated in assays with mutant NC proteins,
revealing that mutations in the zinc finger domains can influence
stimulation of integration. These findings (i) provide a means for
assembling more authentic integrase complexes for mechanistic studies,
(ii) reveal a new activity of NC protein in vitro, (iii) indicate a possible role for NC in vivo, and (iv) provide a possible method for
identifying a new class of inhibitors that disrupt coupled joining.
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INTRODUCTION |
Integration of the
reverse-transcribed retroviral cDNA into host cell DNA is a required
step in retroviral replication (for reviews, see references
16 and 33). Correct integration
requires covalent attachment of viral cDNA to target DNA with a
specific number of target base pairs between the cDNA ends. Such
coupled joining is probably a consequence of correct assembly of
nucleoprotein complexes that hold the cDNA ends in defined relative
positions. Studies of retroviruses that generate aberrant integration
products indicate that defects in coupled joining are associated with
impairments in replication (17, 18, 47). To date, reactions
with recombinant human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) integrase
protein
the virus-encoded protein responsible for the early steps of
integration
have yielded almost exclusively uncoupled products,
probably indicating a defect in higher-order assembly in vitro
(10, 12, 14, 38).
The DNA cutting and joining reactions that mediate HIV cDNA integration
in vivo are well understood (16). Prior to integration, two
nucleotides are removed from each 3' end of the linear cDNA, possibly
to remove heterogeneous additional 3' nucleotides occasionally added by
reverse transcriptase (45, 48). The recessed 3' hydroxyls generated by cleavage then become joined to protruding 5' ends in the
target DNA. Melting of the 5 bp of target DNA between the points of
joining yields gaps at each host-virus DNA junction which are then
repaired, probably by host-encoded enzymes.
Integration in vivo is carried out by large nucleoprotein complexes
named preintegration complexes (PICs) (6, 20, 22). Compositional studies have revealed that the viral integrase (IN), matrix (MA), reverse transcriptase (RT) (7, 23, 27, 45), and
a cellular protein, HMG I(Y) (21), cofractionate with PICs of HIV-1. Other proteins, such as viral protein R (Vpr) and
nucleocapsid (NC) have been detected in some studies (7,
27). The cDNA ends are bound by proteins (15, 45, 58)
that bridge the two cDNA termini (45). Coupled joining by
PICs is evident from the finding of correct 5-bp duplications at
virus-host DNA junctions after repair of integration intermediates
(20, 32, 47a).
Although recombinant HIV-1 integrase carries out coupled joining in
vitro only poorly, avian sarcoma-leukosis virus (ASLV) integrase and
Moloney murine leukemia virus (MLV) integrase can carry out coupled
joining (1, 9, 19, 25, 40, 56, 57). The reason for the
difference between HIV integrase and other integrases is unclear but
serves to focus interest on the unique determinants in HIV.
Progress in understanding the requirements for coupled joining in the
HIV system came from the finding that lysates of virions could direct
coupled joining of model cDNA substrates in vitro (28, 29).
We have analyzed the virion proteins in such extracts and found that
the HIV-1 NC protein can greatly stimulate coupled joining by
recombinant HIV-1 integrase. Analysis of the activities of NC mutants
revealed that mutations altering the zinc fingers of NC influence the
ability to stimulate integration.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
DNA manipulation.
General DNA manipulations were carried out
essentially as described previously (3). Oligonucleotides
used in this study can be found in Table
1. To construct pTA-LTR, the long
terminal repeat (LTR) from NL4-3 was amplified with primers U3NdeI and U5NdeI, giving rise to a complete LTR DNA containing an NdeI
site at each end. The PCR product was cloned into the pCR2.1 vector (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif.). Plasmid pTA-LTRsupF, which contains a
supF gene within the LTR sequence, was constructed as
follows. The supF coding region was obtained from pUCsupF (a
gift of Robert Naviaux), in which the supF gene is cloned at
bp 763 to 1254 of pUC19. The supF gene was released from
plasmid pUCsupF by cleavage with BamHI and ligated into the
PpuMI site of pTA-LTR, yielding pTA-LTRsupF. The
zeocin-transducing plasmid pZeo+ (3,498 bp) was constructed by
digesting pcDNA3.1/Zeo(+) (Invitrogen) with PvuI and
EcoRV and reclosing by ligation. This manipulation removed the beta-lactamase (Ap) coding region.
To generate LTR DNAs for use in integration assays, plasmid pTA-LTR or
pTA-LTRsupF was cleaved with NdeI and the fragment corresponding to the LTR (1,090 bp) was purified on an agarose gel. LTR
DNAs were end labeled by sequential treatment with phosphatase and
kinase in the presence of [
-32P]ATP.
Preparation of virions.
HXB2 virus was obtained from
supernatants of the chronic producer line Molt IIIB. R9 and R9
IN
were obtained from supernatants of cultures of 293T cells transfected
with pR9 (53) or pR9
IN (26). Virions were
purified from cell culture supernatants by centrifugation over a
sucrose cushion and size exclusion chromatography on Sephacryl S-1000,
as described previously (13).
Integration reactions with viral lysates.
Virions (200 ng of
p24 protein per integration reaction) were lysed in a solution of 0.5%
Triton X-100, 4 µg of RNase (DNase free [Boehringer Mannheim]) per
ml, 20 mM HEPES (pH 7.2), and 150 mM KCl (6-µl final volume) and
incubated for 10 min on ice. Subsequently 19 µl of buffer was added
to the lysed virus to yield a 25-µl final volume of 10 mM
MgCl2, 20 mM HEPES (pH 7.2), 12% dimethyl sulfoxide
(DMSO), 6% polyethylene glycol (PEG), 1 mM dithiothreitol (DTT), 40 mM
KCl, 0.12% Triton, and 0.96 µg of RNase A per ml. Samples were
chilled on ice for another 10 min and then centrifuged for 10 min at
7,000 rpm in an Eppendorf centrifuge at 4°C. To the pellet, a
solution of 25 µl of 10 mM MgCl2, 20 mM HEPES (pH 7.2),
12% DMSO, 6% PEG, and 1 mM DTT was added together with 15 ng of LTR
and 100 ng of supercoiled plasmid pCR2.1 (3.9 kb; Invitrogen). The
samples were incubated for 20 min on ice. The reaction was then carried
out by incubating samples for 30 min at 37°C. The reaction was
stopped by addition of sodium dodecyl sulfate to 1% and 1 µg of
proteinase K, and the samples were incubated at 56°C for 1 h.
The proteins were extracted with an equal volume of
phenol-chloroform-isoamylalcohol and then chloroform only. The samples
were analyzed on 1.2% Tris-acetate-EDTA agarose gels containing
ethidium bromide (0.5 µg/ml). Gels were dried and visualized by
autoradiography. Proteins from both HIV strains HXB2 and R9 were both
found to be active in this assay. Added recombinant integrase (325 nM)
was incubated in the viral lysis buffer and centrifuged as above with
or without the
IN viral lysate.
Purification of proteins used in this study.
Recombinant
HIV-1 integrase was purified as described previously (2).
His-tagged integrase containing the F185K and C280S substitutions
(37) was purified as described previously and used in
experiments with NC mutants.
Mutant and wild-type NC proteins were prepared from thioredoxin
fusions. The coding regions for the mutant or wild-type NC proteins
were obtained by PCR amplification of existing proviral or recombinant
NC-encoding clones (30, 31, 59) with the sense primer
4658-333 and the antisense primer 4658-356 (Table 1). Oligonucleotide
4658-333 contains a BglII site and a sequence encoding an
enterokinase cleavage site (Asp-Asp-Asp-Asp-Lys), and the remaining 24 nucleotides (3' end) code for the eight N-terminal amino acid residues
of the HIV-1 p7NC protein from the pNL4-3 proviral clone.
Oligonucleotide 4658-356 contains a SalI site, the
complement of a TAA stop codon, and the complement of the sequence that
codes for the six C-terminal amino acid residues of NC. The fragment
that codes for the 55-amino-acid NC protein was amplified, digested
with BglII and SalI, and ligated into the
homologous sites of the pET32a vector (Novagen, Inc., Madison, Wis.).
Certain NC mutants were created by altering existing pET32a clones with
NC gene inserts and using the Stratagene (La Jolla, Calif.) Quick
Change mutagenesis kit.
For NC protein expression, plasmids were transformed into competent
Escherichia coli BL21 (DE3) cells and cultures were induced by adding isopropylthio-
-galactoside to 0.4 mM and incubated with
shaking for an additional 3 h. Bacteria were pelleted and resuspended in 40 ml of 100 mM CAPS buffer, pH 10, and sonicated for
~1.5 h. The lysate was centrifuged at 3,600 × g in a
Beckman JS-4.2 rotor for 20 min at 4°C. Ten milliliters of
supernatant was mixed with 106 µl of 4 M Tris buffer (pH 8.5), 213 µl of 5 M NaCl, 0.7 µl of 30 mM zinc acetate, and 21 µl of 1 M
CaCl2. The solution was digested with 7 units of EKMax
enterokinase (Invitrogen) for 3 h at room temperature. NC proteins
were purified by reverse-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography with
a C18 reverse-phase column, as described previously
(35, 36). The purified NC proteins were analyzed for the
correct molecular mass by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. Quantitation of
purified NC proteins was performed by amino acid analysis on a Beckman
System 6300 amino acid analyzer (Beckman Coulter, Inc., Fullerton,
Calif.). Purified proteins were aliquoted, one equivalent of zinc
acetate per Zn2+ finger was added (unless otherwise noted),
and the samples were lyophilized.
Sources for purified nucleic acid binding proteins were as follows: MA
protein was a gift of D. Trono (Geneva, Switzerland); Rev protein was a
gift of M. Orsini, D. Rekosh, and M.-L. Hammarskjold (University of
Virginia, Charlottesville); Tat protein was a gift of Kathy Jones (Salk
Institute, La Jolla, Calif.) and J. Brady; HIV-1 RT heterodimer was a
gift of S. LeGrice (Case Western Reserve, Cleveland, Ohio); HMG-1 was a
gift of L. Li (Salk Institute); HMG-2 was a gift of R. Johnson (UCLA);
histone H1 was purchased from Boehringer Mannheim; HU protein was a
gift of A. Segal (SDSU, San Diego, Calif.); BAF protein was a gift of
L. Li (Salk Institute); RNase A was from Qiagen; and polylysine was
from Sigma Chemical Co. HMG I(Y) amino acids 1 to 90 was purified as
described previously for the full-length protein (21).
Integration reactions with recombinant HIV-1 integrase.
A 35 nM concentration of integrase was incubated on ice in a buffer
containing 20 mM HEPES (pH 7.2), 1 mM DTT, 12% DMSO, 6% PEG 8000 (buffered at pH 7.2 with HEPES), 0.1 mg of bovine serum albumin (BSA)
per ml, and 40 mM NaCl in a volume of 20 µl. Integrase was diluted in
a solution of 1 M NaCl, 10 mM DTT, 0.1 mg of BSA per ml, and 50 mM
HEPES (pH 7.6). DNA binding proteins to be tested for stimulation were
also added at this stage as appropriate. DNA binding proteins were
diluted in a solution of 20 mM HEPES (pH 7.2), 150 mM KCl, 1 mM DTT,
and 0.1 mg of BSA per ml. After 10 min, 5 µl of a mix containing 40 ng of labeled LTR (20 nM LTR), 200 ng of pZeo+ target, and 50 mM
MgCl2 was added and further incubated on ice for 20 min. To
carry out reactions, samples were incubated for 1 h at 37°C.
Labeled products were quantitated with a Molecular Dynamics PhosphorImager.
Different preparations of HIV-1 integrase and NC were found to support
coupled joining to different degrees (unpublished data). For integrase,
most active was protein purified according to Allen et al.
(2). Next most active was integrase purified by the original
method of Sherman and Fyfe (52). Least active, though still
sufficient for coupled joining, was His-tagged integrase containing the
F185K and C280S mutations (37). Different integrase preparations purified by the same method were not extensively compared.
The basis for this difference is unknown. In the case of NC, different
batches of NC displayed different activities, and batches with
initially high activities sometimes lost activity during storage. This
variability probably reflects at least in part the sensitivity of NC
protein to oxidation.
Cloning and sequencing of coupled integration products.
In
order to clone integration products for sequencing, a standard
integration reaction was carried out in the presence of viral lysates
(see Table 2) or recombinant integrase and NC (see Table 3) by using
LTR-supF as donor and pZeo+ as target. The integration
reaction was stopped by the addition of proteinase K-SDS, and DNAs were
deproteinized by phenol-chloroform extraction and purified by ethanol
precipitation. Integration products were then cleaved with
EcoRI, which cleaves within the LTR-supF DNA, and
ligated. This step converted coupled joining events involving two LTRs
into single-LTR-coupled products. Only events involving one U3 end and
one U5 end religated to yield an intact LTR-supF DNA. The
ligated DNAs were then transformed into MC1061/p3 cells. The bacteria
were plated on Luria-Bertani agar containing zeocin, tetracycline,
ampicillin, and kanamycin. Zeocin selected for the integration target;
kanamycin selected for the p3 plasmid, containing the ampicillin and
tetracycline resistance genes bearing amber mutations; and ampicillin
and tetracycline selected for the supF gene. Plasmids were
isolated from quadruply resistant colonies, and LTR-target DNA
junctions were sequenced. Base numbering in Tables 2 and 3 is as in the
original pcDNA3.1+/Zeo plasmid (Invitrogen).
 |
RESULTS |
Integration in vitro directed by extracts from HIV-1 virions.
Our studies of coupled joining by HIV-1 integrase initially employed a
viral lysate system based on that used by Goodarzi and coworkers
(29) (Fig. 1). As a model of
the viral cDNA, a 636-bp DNA molecule matching one HIV LTR was used.
LTR DNAs were 32P labeled at each 5' end to permit
detection of integration products. A circular plasmid was used as
target. HIV virions were lysed by exposure to 0.5% Triton X-100 and
then preincubated with LTR DNA, target DNA, and 10 mM MgCl2
on ice. Reactions were carried out by warming the mixture to 37°C for
30 min. Products were then deproteinized, separated by gel
electrophoresis, and visualized by autoradiography.
Figure 2 presents a comparison of
integration products generated in reactions containing purified
recombinant HIV-1 integrase (lane 2) and lysates of HIV-1 virions (lane
3). The structures of integration products are shown beside the gel. In
the presence of recombinant integrase, two main DNA products were seen.
One corresponded to joining of one end of the labeled LTR substrate to
the circular DNA target, yielding a "tagged circle" (illustrated in
Fig. 1). The second corresponded to integration of one LTR DNA into a
second LTR DNA and, as expected, was seen in reactions without added
target (data not shown). The population of these "uncoupled LTR into
LTR products" (illustrated in Fig. 1) ran as a broad band, since
different molecules in the population had different branch points and
hence different electrophoretic mobilities. Both the tagged circle and
the uncoupled LTR into LTR products involved only one LTR end and hence
are products of uncoupled joining (10, 29).

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FIG. 2.
Integration products generated in the presence of lysed
HIV-1 virions or purified integrase. Lanes: 1, unreacted substrate;
lane 2, 325 nM purified integrase protein; lane 3, lysed HIV-1 (HXB2)
virions; lane 4, lysed HIV IN; lane 5, mixture of R9 IN and 325 nM recombinant integrase. Expected structures of integration products
are indicated beside the gel; LTR DNAs are indicated by arrows, and
target DNA is indicated by thin lines.
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In reactions containing lysates from wild-type HIV-1 virions, several
further integration products were seen (Fig. 2, lane 3). One new form
had the DNA length expected for coupled joining of two LTR molecules to
target DNA ("two LTR coupled product," Fig. 1). This reaction
resembled coupled joining in vivo in that one end on each of two LTR
molecules was recruited for integration and joined in a coupled
fashion, thereby linearizing the target DNA.
The tagged circle and coupled integration products were characterized
by isolation of the product DNA and cleavage with diagnostic restriction enzymes. Cleavage of the purified tagged circle (Fig. 3A, lane 2) or two-LTR product (Fig. 3A,
lane 3) with PpuM1, which cleaves in the LTR DNA, yielded fragments of
the lengths expected (Fig. 3A, lanes 4 and 5) from the product
structure diagrams in Fig. 3B and C. Products involving the U5 LTR end
were more abundant, as expected from the previous finding that the U5
end was more reactive than the U3 end (10, 29). Previous
product characterization by Goodarzi et al. (29) yielded
essentially identical conclusions.

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FIG. 3.
Characterization of products of integration reactions
with lysed virions by digestion with restriction enzymes. Unintegrated
HIV cDNA and solo LTR substrates have U3 sequences at one end and U5
sequences at the other end. (A) Autoradiogram of integration products
analyzed by cleavage with restriction enzymes. Lane 1 displays the
isolated integration product. Lane 2 presents the partially purified
tagged circle form. Lane 3 presents the isolated two-LTR coupled form.
Lanes 4 and 5 show these two forms cleaved with PpuMI. Lanes
6 to 8 contain the indicated markers. (B) Expected structure of the
predominant tagged circle form. (C) Major coupled two-LTR products. The
target DNA used was circular pCR2.1 (3.9 kb); the LTR DNA was 636 bp in
length. The major products detected in panel A are as expected from the
diagrams in panels B and C. The expected tagged circle form cleaved
with PpuM1 runs between the uncleaved form and the relaxed
circle form of the target DNA. Cleavage of the two-LTR coupled-joining
product yielded two bands that migrated between the 4,822- and 4,361-bp
markers; the expected sizes are 4,700 and 4,530 bp. Due to preferential
joining of the U5 end, coupled products contained either two U5 ends or
one U5 end and one U3 end joined to the target (C).
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Products of coupled joining were then characterized by cloning and
sequencing (Table 2). The LTR substrate
used for this purpose was modified to contain a supF gene
between the LTR ends. Integration was carried out into a target
containing a zeocin resistance gene. Integration products were
recovered after transformation into E. coli by selecting for
zeocin resistance and SupF function. Sequencing revealed that six of
nine contained the 5-bp duplications of target DNA sequences at
integration junctions characteristic of coupled joining (Table 2)
(29). Other products contained longer duplications or a
deletion, the origins of which were unclear.
As a first step in identifying factors capable of stimulating coupled
joining, extracts from integrase-deleted virions were prepared and
analyzed. Extracts from HIV-1
IN virions failed to support
integration, as expected (Fig. 2, lane 4). However, mixture of extracts
from the HIV-1
IN virus with recombinant integrase resulted in the
appearance of a new band of the mobility expected for the coupled
two-LTR product (Fig. 2, lane 5 [dot]). These data support the
hypothesis that extracts of virions contain factors in addition to
integrase that stimulate coupled joining.
Stimulation of coupled joining by HIV-1 NC and other proteins.
To identify HIV-1 virion factors capable of stimulating coupled
joining, lysed virions were fractionated by differential
centrifugation. Analysis by Western blotting revealed that integrase,
MA, RT, and NC cofractionated with the integration activity while CA
did not (data not shown). The viruses studied were mutant in Vpr, consistent with the idea that Vpr protein is also not important. These
fractions proved difficult to purify further but did provide some
initial indications of candidate stimulatory proteins.
Purified viral proteins were then tested individually for the ability
to stimulate coupled joining by purified integrase (Fig. 4A). Of particular interest was NC
protein, which in previous studies has been reported to stimulate
uncoupled joining (14, 41) or integration by PICs
(20). HIV-1 NC protein (Fig. 4A, lanes 3 to 5), MA protein
(lanes 8 to 10), Rev (lanes 11 to 13), Tat (lanes 14 to 16), and RT
(p66/p51 heterodimeric form, lanes 17 to 19) were each titrated into
reaction mixtures with recombinant HIV-1 integrase. Some stimulation of
both coupled and uncoupled joining was seen upon addition MA, Tat, or
RT p51 homodimer (data not shown), but the stimulatory effect was
greatest by far with NC. NC increased the recovery of coupled products
up to 1,000-fold in the presence of low concentrations (35 nM) of
purified integrase. Under the conditions in Fig. 4A, lane 5, 26% of
the input labeled LTR was converted to the coupled joining product and
another 48% was converted to the uncoupled product, corresponding to a
1,200-fold increase in coupled joining and a 230-fold increase in
uncoupled joining.

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FIG. 4.
Stimulation of coupled joining by various nucleic acid
binding proteins. (A) Products generated in the presence of 35 nM
purified integrase and the indicated viral proteins. Expected
structures of integration products are shown beside the gel. Maximum
concentrations for each (right-most lane in each titration) are as
follows: NC, 8 µg/ml (1 µM); MA, 16 µg/ml (0.94 µM); Rev, 4 µg/ml (0.2 µM); Tat, 4 µg/ml (0.28 µM); RT, 4 µg/ml (78 nM).
Each protein was diluted 1:10 and 1:100 in the two left lanes. (B)
Products generated in the presence of 35 nM purified integrase and the
indicated cellular DNA binding proteins. Maximum concentrations for
each (right-most lane in each titration) are as follows: NC, 8 µg/ml
(1 µM); HMG I(Y), 16 µg/ml (1.4 µM); HMG-1, 4 µg/ml (0.16 µM); HMG-2, 8 µg/ml (0.64 µM); histone H1, 8 µg/ml (0.4 µM);
Hu, 2.4 µg/ml (0.13 µM); BAF, 2 µg/ml (0.2 µM); RNase A, 4 µg/ml (0.3 µM); polylysine, 4 µg/ml (4 µM). Each protein was
diluted 1:10 and 1:100 in the two left lanes.
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To assess the specificity of the NC effect, several cellular nucleic
acid-binding proteins were also tested for the ability to stimulate
coupled joining (Fig. 4B). HMG I(Y) DNA binding domain, HMG-1, and BAF
proteins were tested, since they have previously been proposed to be
involved in integration (1, 21, 42), together with several
other DNA binding proteins for comparison. Slight stimulation was seen
with HMG-1 (lanes 8 to 10), HMG-2 (lanes 11 to 13), and polylysine
(lanes 26 to 28). No detectable stimulation was seen with HMG I(Y)
(lanes 5 to 7), histone H1 (lanes 14 to 16), bacterial HU (lanes 17 to
19), BAF (lanes 20 to 22), or RNase A (lanes 23 to 25). The protein
concentrations used were selected based on preliminary titrations to
optimize activity. In the presence of high concentrations, BAF and HMG I(Y) inhibited integration (data not shown). None of the cellular proteins stimulated coupled joining as well as did NC protein (Fig. 4B,
lane 4).
Optimizing conditions for coupled joining.
Titrations of
reaction components revealed that high concentrations of
Mg2+ favored production of coupled joining products over
uncoupled products (Fig. 5). Little or no
coupled joining is detectable at 10 mM MgCl2 in the absence
of NC (Fig. 5, lane 2), while in the presence of NC both the coupled
and uncoupled products are greatly increased in abundance (Fig. 5,
lanes 3 to 6). At 30 mM MgCl2, the coupled product
predominates even in the absence of NC (Fig. 5, lane 7) and is
increased in abundance in the presence of NC (Fig. 5, lanes 8 to 11).
MnCl2, the divalent metal used in many previous studies,
did not support coupled joining under the conditions studied here
(unpublished data). Addition of zinc (8, 60) also did not
stimulate coupled joining (unpublished data). Six percent PEG was
required for coupled joining (unpublished data). In contrast, under
conditions reported previously for stimulation of uncoupled joining by
NC (i.e., in the presence of 10% glycerol) (14), high
concentrations of MgCl2 were inhibitory. These findings highlight the fastidious nature of the requirements for coupled joining.

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FIG. 5.
Improvement of the yield of coupled-joining products by
optimizing the concentrations of MgCl2 and NC.
Concentrations of NC were 100 nM (lanes 3 and 8), 500 nM (lanes 4 and
9), 1 µM (lanes 5 and 10), and 2 µM (lanes 6 and 11). The integrase
concentration was 35 nM. For this experiment, the LTR-supF
donor was used. Other markings are as in Fig. 2.
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The conditions of the coupled-joining reaction strongly influence the
magnitude of stimulation by NC. In the presence of 30 mM
MgCl2, the degree of stimulation is reduced because the
basal level of coupled joining is higher and added NC does not
stimulate coupled joining to as high a final level. The greatest
stimulation by NC is seen in the presence of 10 mM MgCl2
and minimal concentrations of integrase.
Characterization of products made in the presence of purified
integrase and NC.
The products generated in reactions with
purified recombinant integrase comigrated with those generated in
reactions with viral lysates, suggesting that they were identical in
structure. Nevertheless, DNA products made with purified integrase were
characterized by digestion with restriction enzymes and DNA sequencing.
Diagnostic digestions were carried out with PpuM1, as in
Fig. 3, and also with HindIII and XhoI (Fig.
6). Cleavage tests were
carried out for both the uncoupled tagged circle (Fig. 6A) and the
two-LTR coupled product (Fig. 6B). Structures of digestion products
were fully consistent with assignment of the DNA forms as tagged circle and two-LTR coupled product (Fig. 6C and D). In this case also, joining
of the U5 end was favored over the U3 end. Similar analysis confirmed
the structure of the coupled product generated with 30 mM
MgCl2 in the absence of NC (data not shown).

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FIG. 6.
Characterization of integration products generated in
reactions with recombinant integrase and NC. The suspected tagged
circle product (A) and coupled two-LTR product (B) were isolated from
gels and characterized by digestion with restriction enzymes
(diagrammed in panels C and D). The target DNA used was circular pZeo+.
Cleavage of the putative tagged circle with HindIII
(panel A, lane 2), which cleaves the LTR near the U5 terminus, yields
predominantly a shortened labeled form that migrates near the target
DNA relaxed circle form (C). Cleavage with PpuMI yielded a
longer form, of a size consistent with cleavage near the U3 end (panel
A, lane 3). Cleavage with XhoI, which cuts within the
target, yields a smear of products (panel A, lane 4), as expected for
Y-shaped cleavage products with heterogeneous branch points. The putative two-LTR
coupled-joining product (panel B, lane 7) migrates at the molecular
weight expected for a linearized target DNA joined in a coupled fashion
to two LTRs (4,770 bp [D]). Cleavage with HindIII
(panel B, lane 8) yielded a shortened labeled form of the size expected
for the joining of two U5 ends (3,702 bp, diagrammed in panel D
[top]). A longer form, of the size expected for joining of one U5 end
and one U3 end, was also seen (4,134 bp, diagrammed in panel D
[bottom]). Cleavage with PpuMI yielded predominantly a
form of the size expected for the U5-U5 coupled two-LTR product (4,298 bp [panel B, lane 9]). The second expected PpuMI product,
representing the U3-U5 form (expected size, 4,134 bp), migrated just
below the U5-U5 form and is not clearly resolved in this gel. Cleavage
with XhoI in the target DNA yielded a smear of labeled
products, as expected since the points of integration in the target
differ from molecule to molecule. The designation "hetero"
indicates that this site is heterogeneously positioned in different
product molecules due to the use of different integration sites.
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Further characterization of coupled-joining products was carried out by
cloning and sequencing of junctions between viral and target DNA (Table
3). Integration reactions were carried out with LTR-supF and a pZeo DNA as target. DNAs were
transformed into bacteria, and resistance to zeocin and supF
function was selected; 517 colonies were recovered from a typical
reaction with recombinant integrase and NC. In contrast, reactions
without NC or without integrase yielded no colonies (data not shown).
Seven of 15 insertion products sequenced displayed 5-bp duplications of
target sequences at host-viral DNA junctions characteristic of HIV-1
integration. The other eight products contained deletions of unclear
origin. The larger deletions would not be expected to comigrate with
the coupled-joining product seen on gels and presumably arose from
other DNA forms. Taken together, these data indicate that
coupled-joining products are generated efficiently in reactions with
recombinant integrase and NC.
Stimulation of coupled joining by NC mutants.
To investigate
the determinants in NC important for stimulating coupled joining, a
panel of NC variants was tested (Fig. 7). NC is a basic protein of 55 amino acids, with two
Cys-X2-Cys-X4-His-X4-Cys (CCHC)
sequences that bind zinc (4, 34). Mutants tested included amino acid substitutions (F16A or F16W) or changes in zinc fingers. The
F16A mutant reduced the efficiency of the acceleration of nucleic acid
annealing by NC (24), thus allowing the relationship between
accelerating of annealing and stimulating of integration to be probed.
Mutants in which the types of zinc-binding residues were swapped (Cys
to His or vice versa) were also studied. These mutants were chosen in
an effort to preserve zinc binding while introducing subtle changes in
NC. These NC mutants have also been studied for their effects on viral
replication, offering a chance to begin connecting in vitro
observations to replication in vivo (31). Zinc finger
mutants included ones in which the first zinc finger sequence was
replaced with the second (2.2) or in which the order of zinc fingers
(2.1) was reversed (30). Several further mutants contained
substitutions of the C or H residues, including CCCC/CCHC, CCCC/CCCC,
CCHH/CCHH, CCCC/CCHH, CCHC/CCCC, CCHH/CCHC, and CCHH/CCHH F16W (C and H
indicate the types of zinc-binding residues in the first or second
finger). Wild-type NC lacking zinc was also tested (apo-NC) as was the
NC of MLV.

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|
FIG. 7.
Stimulation of integration in vitro by NC mutants.
Mutants were tested at a concentration of 1.4 µM and integrase was
present at 137.5 nM (His-tagged form), in otherwise standard reactions.
The abundances of the two-LTR coupled-joining products (shaded bars)
and the tagged circle products (open bars) were quantitated by
PhosphorImager and normalized to wild-type NC. Each bar denotes the
average of three reactions; half of the standard deviation is shown by
the error bar.
|
|
Several NC proteins, including CCCC/CCCC, CCCC/CCHC, CCHC/CCCC,
CCHH/CCCC, apo-NC, and MLV NC, showed reduced abilities to stimulate
coupled joining. Similar though less-pronounced effects were seen for
uncoupled joining. Two other mutants, CCHH/CCHH and CCHH/CCHH F16W,
consistently stimulated coupled integration to a greater degree than
wild-type NC. The other mutants stimulated coupled and uncoupled
joining at levels close to wild-type NC.
The NC mutants were then tested for the ability to accelerate annealing
of complementary DNA strands, a well-characterized activity of NC
protein (data not shown). Annealing assays were carried out in
integration buffer to facilitate comparison to integration assays.
Wild-type NC and all mutants, with the exception of CCCC/CCCC
(inactive) and CCCC/CCHH and CCHH/CCCC (partially active), displayed
this activity. The apo-NC protein was active in accelerating annealing
though inactive for stimulating coupled joining. Thus, the requirements
in vitro for stimulating integration could be separated from the
requirements for accelerating annealing. Taken together, the data
support the view that intact NC zinc fingers are important for
stimulating coupled joining in vitro.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Here we present conditions under which purified recombinant HIV-1
integrase carries out correct coupled joining of pairs of cDNA ends in
vitro. The previous finding of Goodarzi and coworkers (29)
that HIV-1 viral lysates could support coupled joining raised the
question of whether recombinant HIV-1 integrase was defective as
purified from bacteria. Data presented here indicate that purified
recombinant integrase can carry out coupled joining relatively
efficiently in the presence of a viral cofactor (NC) and optimized
solution conditions.
Studies of HIV-1 viruses containing mutations in NC have the potential
to clarify whether or not NC is important for integration in vivo.
However, many mutations in NC disrupted steps in replication prior to
integration, such as RNA packaging or reverse transcription (31,
54). Thus, it was not possible to determine whether these mutants
also impaired integration. The CCHH-containing mutants that
hyperstimulated integration, for example, produced little or no viral
cDNA after infection, so their effects on integration could not be
assessed (31).
The CCCC/CCHC NC mutant, however, may affect integration in vivo at
least in part. The mutant protein displayed reduced stimulation of
coupled integration in vitro. In vivo, viruses containing this substitution can form cDNA to within 10% of the wild type, but infectivity is reduced by greater than 104-fold
(31). Thus, the CCCC/CCHC mutant may be blocking integration in those viruses that successfully carry out reverse transcription. Further studies are needed to support the possible effect of this NC
mutant in integration in vivo.
Several proteins in addition to NC have been reported to affect
integration in vitro, raising the question of which are most likely to
be important biologically. Diverse proteins have been reported to
stimulate uncoupled joining, among them NC protein (14, 38, 41,
44). In addition, HMG-1 protein was reported to stimulate coupled
joining by ASLV integrase three- to fivefold in vitro, providing
another candidate (1). Studies of PICs have also revealed
candidates for stimulatory proteins. In a study of HIV-1, PICs were
depleted of required factors by exposure to high concentrations of
salt. Cellular fractions were used to reconstitute activity, and
purification of the activity yielded HMG I(Y) protein. Further studies
demonstrated that HMG I(Y) protein is present in PIC fractions prior to
depletion and contributes the predominant reconstitution activity in
PIC preparations (21, 43). Another protein, BAF, can
stimulate integration in these assays (15, 42), though BAF
has not yet been found in PICs or linked to integration in vivo.
Purified NC protein was also able to stimulate the activity of
salt-stripped PICs but was not detectable in the PIC fractions studied
(21). However, in one study, NC was detected in association
with HIV cDNA in crude PIC fractions (27). NC is likely
associated with replication intermediates in target cells, since NC is
believed to be important for reverse transcription during infection.
Although more data is needed to assess in vivo significance, the
presence of NC and HMG I(Y) in probable replication intermediates,
together with their in vitro activities, supports their potential
importance in vivo.
As yet, the mechanism by which NC stimulates coupled joining is not
fully clarified. Models involving a direct interaction between
integrase and NC do not seem likely at present, since coimmunoprecipitation studies have not revealed an interaction (unpublished data). NC is known to promote dimerization of viral RNA,
packaging of viral RNA, and strand transfer during reverse transcription, all reactions involving nucleic acid condensation (16, 41, 50, 55). In the case of integration, condensation of duplex DNA by NC might facilitate association of the two cDNA ends
in an integration complex. However, effects on DNA condensation alone
may not be sufficient to explain the stimulation of coupled integration. Several proteins known to condense DNA [Apo-NC, MLV NC,
BAF, and HMG I(Y)] did not stimulate coupled joining, suggesting that
additional mechanisms may operate. Possibly NC stimulates integration
in part by promoting DNA distortion. NC is known to melt DNA
(55), and DNA distortion can promote integration under some
circumstances (5, 11, 39, 46, 49, 51). Whether any of these
candidate mechanisms operate in vivo remains to be determined.
The establishment of coupled joining in vitro by HIV-1 integrase may
potentiate a variety of further studies. Mutants of integrase can
be analyzed in vitro for their effects on coupled joining, aiding in
understanding of the protein-protein interfaces important for
higher-order assembly. Integration intermediates formed by coupled joining in vitro may also be useful as substrates for studying
the DNA repair reactions involved in completing integration. Inhibitory
molecules can now be screened for the ability to block coupled joining,
potentially allowing the development of a new class of integrase inhibitors.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank members of the Salk Institute Infectious Disease
Laboratory for suggestions, materials, and comments on the manuscript; Allison Bocksruker for artwork; Leslie Orgel for comments on the manuscript; and Didier Trono for the HIV
IN virus. From the AIDS Vaccine Program, we thank Bradley P. Kane and Donald G. Johnson for
assistance in preparing recombinant NC proteins.
This work was supported by grants AI34786 and GM56553 to F.D.B.
R.J.G. was supported by the National Cancer Institute, U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services, under contract NO1-CO-56000 with SAIC
Frederick. S.C. was supported in part by a fellowship from the Rau
Foundation. F.D.B. is a scholar of the Leukemia Society of America.
 |
ADDENDUM IN PROOF |
C. Deminie has also observed stimulation of coupled joining by NC
protein (unpublished data). In addition, Hindmarsh et al. (P. Hindmarsh, T. Ridky, R. Reeves, M. Andrake, A. M. Skalka, and J. Leis,
J. Virol. 73:2994-3003, 1999) have also reported conditions
for coupled joining by HIV IN.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Infectious
Disease Laboratory, Salk Institute, 10010 North Torrey Pines Rd., La
Jolla, CA 92037. Phone: (619) 453-4100, ext. 1630. Fax: (619) 554-0341. E-mail: rick_bushman{at}qm.salk.edu.
 |
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Journal of Virology, August 1999, p. 6670-6679, Vol. 73, No. 8
0022-538X/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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