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Journal of Virology, July 2003, p. 7582-7589, Vol. 77, No. 13
0022-538X/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.77.13.7582-7589.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Nuclear Export of Vpr Is Required for Efficient Replication of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 in Tissue Macrophages
Michael P. Sherman,1,2 Carlos M. C. de Noronha,1 Lauren A. Eckstein,1 Jason Hataye,1 Pamela Mundt,1 Samuel A. F. Williams,1 Jason A. Neidleman,1 Mark A. Goldsmith,1,2 and Warner C. Greene1,2,3*
Gladstone Institute of Virology and Immunology,1
Departments of Medicine,2
Microbiology and Immunology, University of California, San Francisco, California3
Received 9 December 2002/
Accepted 4 April 2003

ABSTRACT
Retroviruses must gain access to the host cell nucleus for subsequent
replication and viral propagation. Human immunodeficiency virus
type 1 (HIV-1) and other primate lentiviruses are distinguished
from the gammaretroviruses by their ability to infect nondividing
cells such as macrophages, an important viral reservoir in vivo.
Rather than requiring nuclear membrane breakdown during cell
division, the HIV-1 preintegration complex (PIC) enters the
nucleus by traversing the central aqueous channel of the limiting
nuclear pore complex. The HIV-1 PIC contains three nucleophilic
proteins, matrix, integrase, and Vpr, all of which have been
implicated in nuclear targeting. The mechanism by which Vpr
can display such nucleophilic properties and yet also be available
for incorporation into virions assembling at the plasma membrane
is unresolved. We recently characterized Vpr as a nucleocytoplasmic
shuttling protein that contains two novel nuclear import signals
and an exportin-1-dependent nuclear export signal (NES). We
now demonstrate that mutation of this NES impairs the incorporation
of Vpr into newly formed virions. Furthermore, we find that
the Vpr NES is required for efficient HIV replication in tissue
macrophages present in human spleens and tonsils. These findings
underscore how the nucleocytoplasmic shuttling of Vpr not only
contributes to nuclear import of the HIV-1 PIC but also enables
Vpr to be present in the cytoplasm for incorporation into virions,
leading to enhancement of viral spread within nondividing tissue
macrophages.

INTRODUCTION
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) and other primate
lentiviruses are able to infect nondividing cells, notably terminally
differentiated macrophages (
41), an important viral reservoir
within the infected host (
31,
34,
53). This biological feature
distinguishes the lentiviruses from the oncoretroviruses (or
gammaretroviruses), in which cell division associated with nuclear
membrane dissolution is required for infection (
33,
42,
62).
HIV-1 is also able to infect resting, nondividing T cells in
lymphoid tissues (
13). These nondividing T cells may contribute
to the establishment of protected reservoirs in the host, undermining
attempts to eradicate virus-producing cells in the long term
(
5,
6,
15,
56,
77).
After entry by fusion and uncoating, the viral reverse transcriptase complex traverses the cytoplasm while reverse transcribing the two strands of RNA into DNA (20), forming the viral preintegration complex (PIC). The nuclear envelope forms a barrier that the PIC must negotiate. The nuclear envelope is studded with nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) that form a conduit with a central aqueous channel mediating bidirectional transport of many macromolecules. The NPC corresponds to a 125-MDa structure comprising 50 to 100 polypeptides. Many of these proteins are members of the nucleoporin family characterized by FG repeats (46). During active transport, the central aqueous channel accommodates protein complexes as large as 25 nm in diameter. However, the HIV-1 PIC exhibits a Stokes diameter of 56 nm and represents one of the largest known cargoes successfully transported across the NPC (48). How HIV-1 performs this feat of "molecular gymnastics" remains unknown (66).
All retroviruses contain three major open reading frames, including gag (generates the viral core after intravirion processing of the p55gag precursor polypeptide), pol (encodes the reverse transcriptase, integrase, and protease enzymes), and env (directs the production of the transmembrane and surface glycoproteins). In addition, the primate lentiviruses contain genes for regulatory (rev and tat) and accessory (vpr, vpx, vpu, vif, and nef) proteins. Viral protein R (Vpr) is highly conserved in vivo (47, 65) and serves many functions in the viral life cycle yet is frequently lost during in vitro propagation of the virus (25, 80), highlighting an experimental limitation of such in vitro culture systems.
Vpr induces G2 cell cycle arrest in proliferating human cells when it is overexpressed (1, 25, 28, 60) or in the context of infection with a recombinant vector (37). This effect correlates with the production of herniations in the nuclear envelope (10). Arrest in the G2 phase of the cell cycle enhances viral replication, in part by increasing the activity of the long terminal repeat (25). Other studies suggest that the prolonged G2 arrest induced by Vpr promotes apoptosis of the infected cell, perhaps leading to increased virion release and enhanced viral burden (57, 70-72, 78). Although it has been suggested that Vpr inhibits apoptosis early and promotes apoptosis late during the course of HIV-1 infection (9), we have not observed a consistent effect of Vpr on T-cell depletion in infected lymphoid histocultures (14).
Structural studies performed with full-length, synthetic Vpr indicate that this 96-amino-acid, 14-kDa protein contains a helix-turn-helix domain between residues 17 and 50 and an
-helical stretch between residues 53 and 78 (30). The carboxy-terminal region of Vpr corresponds to an arginine-rich segment that can influence the stability and, potentially, the structure of the entire protein (79). In a previous study, we defined two unique nuclear targeting signals within Vpr: one residing within the arginine-rich carboxy-terminal segment and a second that depends on highly conserved leucines present in the two
-helical regions (35, 64). The distal leucine-rich helix also contains a nuclear export signal (NES) (64). This NES utilizes the chromosome maintenance region 1 protein (CRM1) (17, 52), which binds to the leucine-rich NES directly and mediates export through the NPC in a leptomycin B-sensitive manner (51, 76). However, the biological significance of the nucleocytoplasmic shuttling properties of Vpr remains unknown.
Vpr is predominantly found in the nuclei of HIV-1-infected cells (43), probably reflecting the strength of its two nuclear targeting signals (64). This nucleophilic property of Vpr, coupled with its presence in the viral PIC, led to the observation that Vpr facilitates more efficient HIV-1 replication in nondividing monocyte-derived macrophages (4, 8, 22, 29). In vitro assays further supported a direct role for Vpr in PIC import (58, 59). However, more recent studies have questioned the role of Vpr in the nuclear uptake of the HIV-1 PIC (2) and have also shown that Vpr is not required for HIV infection of nondividing T cells (14). Further, it is unclear how this nucleophilic protein is incorporated into virions, which are assembled in the cytoplasm at or near the plasma membrane.
In this study, we investigated whether the nuclear export function of Vpr contributes to virion incorporation and whether virion Vpr contributes to viral replication in tissue macrophages. For these studies, we have employed HIV molecular clones containing a mutation (L67A) in the distal helix of Vpr that selectively compromises the nuclear export phenotype of Vpr while maintaining its nuclear import and G2 cell cycle-arresting functions in HIV-1-infected peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). We have evaluated the growth of wild-type and mutant viruses in both the T-cell and macrophage compartments of lymphoid histocultures produced with human tonsillar or splenic tissue. HIV infection in the ex vivo lymphoid histoculture system is likely to more closely approximate the conditions encountered in vivo than does infection of mitogen-stimulated PBMCs (23, 24). This tissue-based system is composed of a mixture of HIV-1 targets, including lymphocytes, macrophages, and the supporting cellular network. It requires no addition of cytokines or activating or differentiating agents like those used in more homogeneous primary cellular systems.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Plasmids.
A hemagglutinin (HA) epitope was introduced at the amino terminus
of NL4-3 Vpr to form HA-Vpr as previously described (
65). For
subcellular localization studies, we used a green fluorescence
protein (GFP)-pyruvate kinase (PK)-Vpr chimera (
64). This GFP-PK-Vpr
fusion protein or relevant Vpr mutants allowed subcellular localization
by fluorescence microscopy. Since the backbone is larger (

90
kDa) than the passive diffusion size of the NPC (

60 kDa), its
import and export occur by active transport (
52). The nuclear
localization sequence (NLS)-GFP-PK-Vpr construct has been characterized
(
64), and an L67A mutation was derived by cloning the NLS (PKKKRKV)
from the simian virus 40 (SV40) large T antigen at the amino
terminus of the GFP-PK-VprL67A chimera (
64). HIV-1 infection
experiments were performed using HIV-1
107, composed of an NL4-3
viral backbone modified to contain the V1 to V3 loop from the
envelope of the chemokine receptor 5 (CCR5)-dependent primary
isolate, Ba-L (
73). This modification enables the 107 virus
to infect macrophages and CCR5
+ CD4
+ T cells. The 107 virus
containing the VprL67A point mutation was constructed by using
paired PCR primers overlapping the
EcoRI site and a downstream
NheI site located distal to the end of the V3 loop. This amplicon
was cloned directly into the digested wild-type viral construct
and sequenced to verify that only this single point mutation
had been introduced. The construction of the HIV-1 NL4-3

Vpr
strain has been described previously (
14).
Cell cultures, transfections, and microscopic analysis.
Expression vector DNA was transfected into HeLa or 293T cells with calcium phosphate. Cells were cultured in Dulbecco modified Eagle medium (GIBCO BRL, Gaithersburg, Md.) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum, 2 mM L-glutamine, penicillin G (100 U/ml), and streptomycin (100 µg/ml). All plasmids were transfected with either 4 µg of DNA per well of six-well plates or 3 µg in experiments incorporating 1 µg of an expression vector encoding the red fluorescent protein (RFP) (pDsRed1-N1) (Clontech, Palo Alto, Calif.). Cells plated on coverslips for microscopic analyses were washed with phosphate-buffered saline, fixed for 10 min in 1% paraformaldehyde, and rinsed in water. The coverslips were then inverted and mounted on glass slides using Gel Mount (Biomeda Corp., Foster City, Calif.). Nuclei were visualized with Hoechst 33342 stain (10 µg/ml; Molecular Probes, Eugene, Oreg.) added to the paraformaldehyde. Cells were analyzed with a Nikon TE 300 Quantum fluorescence microscope and a Hamamatsu Orca II charge-coupled device camera.
Heterokaryon analyses.
Heterokaryons were generated as described previously (64, 69). Briefly, transfected 293T cells were cultured for 24 h, washed, trypsinized, and replated overnight at a 1:10 ratio with excess untransfected HeLa cells to achieve a total cell concentration of 1.5 x 106 per well. The cells were exposed to cycloheximide (25 µg/ml) for 1 h to prevent de novo protein synthesis and then subjected to membrane fusion by the addition of 50% polyethylene glycol for 3 min. The cells were washed with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) and incubated for 1 h with cycloheximide. The pDsRed1-N1 vector expressing RFP was also included in the transfections. RFP localizes in the nucleus and cytoplasm of the donor cell and diffuses into the entire cytoplasm of the newly formed heterokaryon, thus delineating its boundaries. However, while RFP is present in the donor nucleus of the heterokaryon, it does not enter the newly fused nuclei (recipient nuclei) during this 2-h procedure. Thus, it is possible to discern readily whether the test protein linked to the GFP shuttles from the donor nucleus (red) to the recipient nuclei (unstained) within the heterokaryon.
Western blot and coimmunoprecipitation analyses.
Coimmunoprecipitation experiments were performed by cotransfecting the HA-Vpr vector with Pr55
MA-GFP (11), which contains the p6 domain that mediates Vpr binding. Pr55
MA-GFP lacks the RNA retention signal in MA that inhibits RNA export and subsequent expression (63). An equivalent number of 293T cells (600,000 cells) were transfected and harvested 48 h later in 500 µl of lysis buffer (50 mM HEPES [pH 7.9], 250 mM NaCl, 0.5% NP-40 detergent, 0.5 mM EDTA supplemented with protease inhibitor [Roche] [1 tablet/ml], 100 µM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride). Lysates were aliquoted for direct analysis or incubated with monoclonal mouse antibody HA.11 immobilized on Sepharose Fast Flow beads (Covance) for 15 h at 4°C and then washed three times with lysis buffer. The beads were boiled for 5 min in loading buffer to dissociate any bound proteins before analysis by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Western blotting was performed with monoclonal anti-HA (Boehringer Manheim), polyclonal anti-GFP (Clontech), monoclonal anti-p24gag (NEN) or polyclonal rabbit anti-Vpr (35) antiserum diluted 1:2,000.
PBMC isolation and infection.
HIV-seronegative blood was obtained by leukopheresis, and mononuclear cells were isolated on Histopaque-1077, washed with PBS, and activated with phytohemagglutinin (Sigma, St. Louis, Mo.) at 50 µg/ml. After 24 h, the cells were washed and cultured in RPMI supplemented with interleukin-2 (10 U/ml; Roche). Cultures were infected with HIV-1 by resuspending 107 cells and 200 ng of viral stocks in 1 ml of medium for 2 h before washing them and culturing them at 106 cells/ml.
Cell cycle analyses.
Cell cycle experiments were performed with pEGFP expression vector (Clontech) cotransfected into 293T cells at a 1:7 ratio with the indicated HA control or HA-Vpr expression vector. After culture for 24 to 48 h, the cells were trypsinized and fixed for 30 min in 2% formaldehyde. The cells were next washed with PBS and treated with 1 mg of RNase A per ml plus 0.01 mM To-Pro-3 iodide (Molecular Probes) in PBS for 30 min. Cellular DNA content in the transfected (GFP+) and untransfected (GFP-) cells was assessed with a FACScan flow cytometer. DNA profiles were analyzed with FlowJo software (Treestar). PBMCs, after 5 days of infection, were processed similarly except that fixation and permeabilization were performed with a solution of 1% paraformaldehyde, 1 mg of human immunoglobulin G per ml, and 0.1% Tween 20 in fluorescence-activated cell sorter buffer (PBS with 2% fetal calf serum). Lymphocytes were analyzed by first gating on live, cycling cells as determined by cell size (forward scatter) and granularity (side scatter) and by DNA content with mock-infected controls. This cycling gate was then interrogated identically between the different infections for intracellular Gag polyprotein expression with the KC57 monoclonal anti-p24 antibody (1:50 dilution) (Coulter).
Preparation of viral stocks.
Molecular clones of HIV-1 proviruses were transfected into 293T cells as described above, and the culture supernatants were collected after 48 h. These viral preparations were centrifuged for 10 min at 5,000 rpm in a Beckman GH 3.7 rotor before being aliquoted and frozen. The p24gag concentration was determined by a standard enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (NEN), and the 50% tissue culture infective dose (TCID50) was determined by limiting dilution using pooled, phytohemagglutinin-activated PBMC cultures as targets (23, 55). Virus (300 ng of p24gag) was collected by ultracentrifugation at 40,000 x g for 90 min to assess virion incorporation of Vpr.
Culture and infection of human lymphoid tissues ex vivo.
The ex vivo lymphoid histoculture system was used to more closely approximate HIV infection events occurring in vivo. This system supports viral infection and replication in the absence of exogenous cytokine stimulation and provides the diverse array of cells present in normal lymphoid tissues (23, 26, 55). Noninflammatory spleen or tonsil tissue (obtained from the National Disease Research Interchange) was sectioned into 2- to 3-mm blocks and cultured as described previously (23). Six blocks per well were inoculated with HIV-1 by dropwise addition of 50 TCID50. At the indicated times, the medium was collected from the wells to monitor the replication kinetics or the tissue was mechanically disrupted and subjected to flow cytometric analysis as described above for PBMCs. In addition, cells derived from lymphoid tissue were immunostained with various antibodies, including anti-CD3, anti-CD4, anti-CD14, and anti-CD68. Replicates represent data collected from three separate wells.

RESULTS
Segregation of the Vpr NES from the overlapping nuclear import signal.
We previously mapped an NES to the leucine-rich domain (LQQLL)
of the distal helix spanning amino acids 64 to 68 of Vpr (64).
Our mutational analysis further revealed that the L67A analogue
was effectively imported into the nucleus but that L64A and
L68A Vpr analogues were not. We next investigated the nuclear
export properties of the L67A mutant. Wild-type and L67A Vpr
were fused at the carboxy terminus of the NLS-GFP-PK chimera,
and heterokaryon shuttling studies were performed (Fig.
1).
The fusion protein containing wild-type Vpr effectively relocalized
into the acceptor nuclei in the heterokaryons, indicating effective
shuttling. However, a chimera containing the VprL67A mutant
failed to exit the donor nucleus. GFP-PK-VprL67A localizes to
the nucleus after addition of the export inhibitor leptomycin
B (
64) but appears predominantly in the cytoplasm at baseline,
indicating that some degree of the nuclear export function is
retained (data not shown). However, when measured against the
import strength of the SV40 NLS, as shown in these experiments,
the nuclear export properties of the L67A Vpr mutant were significantly
compromised.
The VprL67A export mutant causes G2 cell cycle arrest.
To assess whether the L67A mutant interferes with the G
2-arresting
properties of Vpr, an HA-VprL67A expression vector was prepared
and introduced into 293T cells. Western blotting revealed that
wild-type Vpr and the VprL67A mutant were expressed at comparable
levels (Fig.
2A). Cell cycle analysis showed that the levels
of G
2 cell cycle arrest were similar in cells transfected with
wild-type and L67A export mutant Vpr. To verify that this mutant
causes cell cycle arrest at levels achieved during HIV-1 infection
of primary cells, we generated proviral molecular clones containing
the single VprL67A point mutation or lacking Vpr altogether.
Stocks of wild-type 107, 107L67A, and 107

Vpr generated after
transfection of 293T cells were equally infectious as determined
by TCID
50/p24
gag content (data not shown). PBMCs were infected
with these viruses, and the cell cycle profiles were assessed
in the p24
gag-positive lymphocytes (those productively infected
and making the p55
gag precursor of p24
gag) and p24
gag-negative
lymphocytes by analyzing their DNA contents (Fig.
2B). The 107-
and 107VprL67A-infected lymphocytes displayed similar increases
in the percentage of cells with a 4
N complement of DNA compared
with 107

Vpr-infected lymphocytes, indicating retention of G
2-arresting
properties by the L67A mutant in these primary cells.
Compromise of Vpr export results in decreased incorporation of Vpr into virions.
One possible function for Vpr nuclear export is to ensure that
there are adequate amounts of this protein in the cytoplasmic
compartment to allow its incorporation into new virions. Since
107, 107VprL67A, and 107

Vpr were equally infectious in PBMC
cultures, similar amounts of viral particles, as measured by
p24
gag, were pelleted and examined for virion-associated Vpr
(Fig.
3A). Markedly less (<3%) VprL67A than wild-type Vpr
was associated with virions. However, these findings do not
exclude the possibility that the L67A mutation interfered with
the binding of Vpr to the p6 component of the p55
gag precursor
and, as a result, was not effectively recruited to the virion.
Although previous mapping studies indicated that the p6-binding
domain of Vpr is located in the helix-turn-helix domain at the
amino terminus (
44,
45), we performed immunoprecipitation experiments
to directly test whether the L67A mutant binds as well as p6
wild-type Vpr does (Fig.
3B). These studies revealed indistinguishable
levels of binding of VprL67A and wild-type Vpr to Gag as measured
with the Pr55

MA-GFP fusion protein. Immunoprecipitation and
immunoblotting confirmed that similar amounts of HA-tagged Vpr
and Gag proteins were expressed under each of these conditions.
Vpr export is required for efficient infection of macrophages present in human lymphoid tissues.
Spleen and tonsil tissue offer an important tool to study the
replication of HIV-1 in what appears to be a more physiologically
relevant system. As is true for activated PBMC infection, we
observed no dependence on Vpr for replication of CXCR4-dependent
viruses (
14). Consistent with this observation, examination
of the number of infected T cells by intracellular anti-p24
gag immunostaining showed no dependence on Vpr for CCR5-dependent
viral infection of CD4
+ T lymphocytes (Fig.
4A). However, when
the number of HIV-producing macrophages was assessed, a 60%
reduction was consistently observed with the CCR5-dependent
virus containing the Vpr export mutant (L67A) compared to wild-type
virus. Viruses lacking Vpr displayed an equivalent decrease.
Since both nuclear import and G
2 cell cycle arrest are intact
with VprL67A, these results suggest that nuclear export of Vpr
is important for viral spread to macrophages present in lymphoid
tissues. Because nuclear export appears to be important for
incorporation of Vpr into virions, these data imply that Vpr
is required during the initial phase of infection of target
macrophages in these tissues. Of note, although macrophages
represent only about 1% of the lymphoid tissue, we observed
a 67% reduction in the amount of p24
gag present in the media
of these lymphoid histocultures after infection with virus containing
the VprL67A export mutant or lacking Vpr altogether. These findings
support the notion that macrophages are an important reservoir
that disproportionately contribute to viral burden in these
lymphoid tissues (
14).

DISCUSSION
This study shows that the nuclear export property of the nucleocytoplasmic
shuttling protein Vpr is required for efficient incorporation
of Vpr into virions, which is required for efficient HIV-1 replication
in tissue macrophages. We studied a Vpr mutant (L67A) that is
compromised in its nuclear export property but retains wild-type
nuclear import and causes G
2 cell cycle arrest. Using this mutant
in the context of a molecular HIV clone to infect lymphoid histocultures
derived from human tonsil or spleen tissue, we found that the
limited incorporation of the Vpr L67A mutant into virions reduced
the number of infected tissue macrophages by 60%. A similar
reduction was obtained with viruses lacking the entire Vpr gene.
In contrast, the L67A Vpr export mutant had no effect on levels
of HIV infection of T cells within the same lymphoid cultures.
Nevertheless, we observed a 67% reduction in viral production
in these tissues, even though only 1% of the available cellular
targets for infection are macrophages. These findings support
the notion that both virion-associated Vpr and macrophage targets
of viral replication are key factors in the overall HIV-1 load
generated in these lymphoid tissues. Both HIV replication in
macrophages and PIC import depend upon Vpr. This is further
supported by the observation that the HIV-2/simian immunodeficiency
virus SM Vpx protein aids in PIC import into the cell nucleus
(
16) and also enhances infections of macrophages in lymphoid
tissues (
14). These data also add support to the proposal that
infected macrophages significantly contribute to the viral load
of HIV-1-infected patients (
14,
26,
31,
34,
53).
Vpr is incorporated into the HIV-1 PIC and is thought to facilitate its nuclear import in cooperation with the matrix (MA) (3, 22, 27, 75) and integrase (2, 21) proteins as well as the central DNA flap (81); however, the actual involvement of integrase and the central DNA flap has recently been questioned (12). The specific role of MA in PIC import has also been questioned (19, 50, 61) but may be partially explained by recognition that p55gag is a nucleocytoplasmic shuttling protein (11). Finally, even the role of Vpr during PIC import has been controversial. Vpr facilitates replication in monocyte-derived macrophages, but only when virus is added at a low multiplicity of infection (21). Impaired viral DNA import requires mutations in both Vpr and MA, suggesting at least some redundancy in their functions (29). Others have concluded that Vpr does not contribute to HIV infection of monocyte-derived macrophages at all independently of MA (27) or even with the loss of both these nuclear import signals (40). However, in the more biologically relevant context of lymphoid tissue, Vpr clearly facilitated replication in tissue macrophages (14), and in contrast to other studies (32), its presence in the virion is required for this effect. It is clear that Vpr does not facilitate replication in artificially arrested T cells (2, 8, 27). Further, in our previous work utilizing the CXCR-4-dependent HIV strain NL4-3, we demonstrated that Vpr does not facilitate HIV infection of resting T cells infected in ex vivo lymphoid histocultures (14). Vpr also does not contribute to overall viral production when macrophages are excluded from infection, as seen with NL4-3 infection of lymphoid tissues (14). These findings suggest that Vpr exerts its effects in a cell type-restricted manner.
Jenkins et al. have confirmed the nucleocytoplasmic shuttling properties of Vpr (36). Curiously, in this study, Vpr export was insensitive to leptomycin B even though mutations in the predicted leucine-rich, CRM-1-binding domain abrogate the phenotype (36, 64). Our prior studies demonstrated that leptomycin B impairs nuclear export of Vpr (64). Jenkins et al. also suggested that nuclear export of Vpr was not required for virion incorporation when virions were produced in the presence of cotransfected plasmids encoding a Vpr export mutant. While Vpr is specifically incorporated into the virion through interaction with the p6 portion of the p55gag precursor protein (7, 39, 54, 79), the stoichiometry, once thought to be 1:1 with p55gag in the virion, is now estimated to be as low as 1:7 with capsid (49) or even as low as 14 to 18 Vpr molecules per virion (67). More importantly, the quantity of Vpr in the virion can be greatly enhanced (up to ca. 40-fold) by cotransfecting cells with Vpr and proviral DNA expression plasmids (67, 68). Such overexpression experiments involving Vpr must therefore be interpreted with caution. Specifically, the levels of Vpr achieved in the study by Jenkins et al. (36) may have led to increased cytoplasmic concentrations of Vpr that masked the key function of the NES within Vpr. In our experiments, the VprL67A mutant was cloned into the viral genome and thus was expressed at levels characteristic of wild-type HIV-1 infection. Under these conditions, the Vpr NES is key for full incorporation of Vpr into virions.
The absence of Vpr does not completely prevent the infection of tissue macrophages. Vpr enhances such infections either by acting synergistically with the other import factors or by providing a redundant signal for more efficient import of the PIC across the NPC. It has been suggested that Vpr acts like an importin-ß homologue through its direct binding to nucleoporins within the NPC, although this appears to be context dependent (18, 58, 74). While MA and integrase utilize the importin-
/importin-ß-dependent pathway of nuclear import, Vpr possesses noncanonical NLSs and is not imported exclusively through these classical mechanisms (21, 22, 35, 38, 64). Thus HIV-1 may have adapted a novel strategy to bypass cellular defense mechanisms targeted at excluding viruses from the nucleus. Importantly, Vpr does not facilitate the infection of resting, nondividing T cells in the same tissue context where macrophage infection is enhanced (13, 14). Therefore, cell-specific factors must dictate whether Vpr is required for or is active in PIC import. In view of the unexpectedly large contribution of infected macrophages to the viral burden in lymphatic tissues, interrupting macrophage-dependent growth by compromising Vpr action in vivo could lead to a sharp decline in the viral burden in infected patients.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Robin Givens for assistance in the preparation of the
manuscript; John Carroll, Jack Hull, Stephen Gonzales, and Chris
Goodfellow for assistance with graphics; and Stephen Ordway
and Gary Howard for editorial assistance.
M.P.S. was supported by NIH/NIAID grant K08-AI01866. L.A.E. was supported by the Biomedical Sciences Graduate Program (BMS) and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Medical Scientist Training Program (MSTP) at University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). This work was supported by NIH grant R01-AI45234 (W.C.G.) and the UCSF-GIVI Center for AIDS Research (NIH P30-MH59037) (W.C.G.) and in part by NIH grant R01-AI43695 (M.A.G.), the UCSF-California AIDS Research Center (CC99-SF-001) (M.A.G. and W.C.G.), and the J. David Gladstone Institutes (M.A.G. and W.C.G.).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Gladstone Institute of Virology and Immunology, P.O. Box 419100, San Francisco, CA 94141-9100. Phone: (415) 826-3800. Fax: (415) 826-1817. E-mail:
wgreene{at}gladstone.ucsf.edu.


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Journal of Virology, July 2003, p. 7582-7589, Vol. 77, No. 13
0022-538X/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.77.13.7582-7589.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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