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Journal of Virology, January 2005, p. 1133-1141, Vol. 79, No. 2
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.2.1133-1141.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, and Program in Genetics and Medical Scientist Training Program, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York
Received 27 June 2004/ Accepted 26 August 2004
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These diverse functions are executed through independent interactions of Nef with a broad array of downstream effectors in protein sorting and signaling machineries. For example, the accelerated endocytosis of TCR:CD3 by Nef is mediated by formation of higher-order protein complexes in which Nef, the CD3
subunit of TCR:CD3, and the AP-2 clathrin adaptor bind cooperatively (18, 45). Specific recruitment of other cell surface receptors to the endocytic machinery is likely mediated by similar mechanisms. Nef also forms stable complexes with several elements in the Rac signaling pathway that control various aspects of cell signaling and the cytoskeleton, including DOCK2-ELMO1 and possibly Vav guanine nucleotide exchange factors, Rac, and p21-activated kinase (PAK2) (2, 10, 20, 31, 36, 37).
All previously described Nef functions require that a functional myristoylation signal be present at the N terminus of Nef (26, 32, 38, 42, 50). N myristoylation is catalyzed by the enzyme myristoyl coenzyme A (myristoyl-CoA):protein N-myristoyltransferase (NMT), which transfers a myristic acid moiety (C14:0) from myristoyl-CoA and attaches it via an amide bond to the N-terminal glycines of both cellular and viral substrate proteins (5, 7). At least two mammalian NMT isoforms (NMT-1 and NMT-2) exist and are encoded by separate genes in both the mouse and human genomes (12, 13).
Molecular mechanisms that mediate a subset of Nef functions such as downregulation of cell surface receptors have been described in considerable detail, whereas interactions with other cellular machineries are less clear. To reveal other events leading to Nef biogenesis and function, we carried out biochemical and protein microsequencing experiments intended to identify host cell proteins with which Nef associates. Previously, we reported that the DOCK2-ELMO1-Rac complex is a major target of Nef for signal transduction in T cells and that HIV-1 Nef activates Rac through binding to this complex (20). Here, using a similar strategy, we found that Nef forms a stable complex specifically with N-myristoyltransferase isoform 1. The association requires an N-terminal region of Nef containing an intact myristoylation signal, is modulated by agents that alter the cellular myristoyl-CoA pool, and, therefore, represents a transient intermediate of the myristoylation reaction of Nef. We further demonstrated that two other NMT substrates, HIV-1 Gag and cellular protein tyrosine kinase Hck, also associate with NMT but show different isoform preferences.
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23-74) mutants were described previously (19, 26, 35, 43). In 239(G2
).AH, the glycine at position 2 in SIVmac 239 Nef was replaced with the AH epitope. Epitope-tagged nef genes were subcloned into pCG (16) and BABE(puro) (28) mammalian expression vectors. The AH epitope-tagged green fluorescent protein (GFP) gene was constructed as described above for nef. Genes encoding human NMT-1 and NMT-2 were generously provided by B. Cravatt (Scripps Research Institute) and modified to encode a T7 epitope (MASMTGGQQMG) at the N terminus of NMT. Genes encoding Nef-GFP fusion protein and H-tagged HIV-1 NL4-3 Gag and human Hck protein tyrosine kinase were constructed by using overlap PCR as previously described (15) and subcloned into pCG mammalian expression vectors. Cell lines and retroviral transduction. Jurkat T cells were maintained in RPMI 1640 medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum, 2 mM glutamine, 10 mM HEPES (pH 7.4), and antibiotics (100 U of penicillin per ml and 100 µg of streptomycin per ml) (16). Phoenix-ampho packaging cells (kindly provided by G. Nolan, Stanford University) and Cos-7 cells (14) were maintained in Dulbecco modified Eagle medium supplemented as described above. BABE(puro) plasmids were transfected into Phoenix-ampho cells by calcium phosphate coprecipitation method (46). Virus-containing cell culture medium was removed 48 h after transfection, filtered (0.45-µm-pore-size filter; Millipore) and used to infect 1 x 105 to 2 x 105 Jurkat T cells in complete RPMI medium supplemented with Polybrene (4 µg/ml; Sigma). Infected cell populations were selected with puromycin (0.4 µg/ml) for 7 to 10 days.
Immunoaffinity purification of Nef and associated proteins from Jurkat T cells.
Immunoaffinity purification of Nef and associated proteins was performed as previously described (20) except for using different epitope tags. Briefly, CD4+ Jurkat T cells were maintained in complete RPMI medium containing puromycin (0.8 µg/ml) in spinner cultures. Every 1 to 2 days, sufficient fresh medium was added to adjust the cell density to 105 cells/ml. Spinner cell cultures were expanded to 6 to 8 liters, and cells were harvested when cell densities reached 5 x 105 to 7 x 105 cells/ml. Detergent extracts were prepared as described previously (20). Monoclonal antibody (MAb) 12CA5, specific for the HA epitope (
-H), was obtained from the Monoclonal Shared Resource at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. MAb specific for AU-1 (
-A) was purchased from Babco. For immunoprecipitation experiments,
-H and
-A MAbs were cross-linked to protein G-agarose beads (Roche) (17). Immunoprecipitations were performed for 4 h, beads were washed extensively in lysis buffer, and protein complexes were eluted in lysis buffer containing the appropriate peptide at 0.2 mg/ml. Eluates were concentrated by using Microcon centrifugal filter devices (molecular mass cutoff, 10 kDa; Millipore) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Proteins were resolved on sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-8 to 17% gradient polyacrylamide gels and stained with silver nitrate for analytical experiments (17) or with SimplyBlue Safe Stain (Invitrogen). Liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectroscopy (LC/MS/MS) microsequencing and data analysis were performed at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Cancer Center Protein Chemistry shared resource as described previously (20). Proteomic data were analyzed with Profound software, which is available online from http://prowl.rockefeller.edu. Profound uses "expectation values" to rate matches between experimental spectra and protein sequences in the database. The simple interpretation of an expectation value is the number of matches that would be expected to have a particular score if the matches to the database were completely random. Therefore, the smaller the expectation value, the more likely that a particular match is a true match rather than a random one. The description of the Profound algorithm is available online from http://prowl.rockefeller.edu/.
Transient assays of NMT association with Nef.
Cos7 cells were transfected with plasmid pCG expressing epitope-tagged NMT, Nef, Nef-GFP chimeras, Gag, or Hck by electroporation, collected 36 to 48 h later, and extracted in lysis buffer (16, 19). Extracts were immunoprecipitated with
-H beads. The beads were collected and washed two times with lysis buffer and three times with lysis buffer supplemented with 500 mM LiCl, and samples were analyzed by immunoblotting.
SDS-PAGE and immunoblot analyses.
T7 epitope-specific MAbs conjugated to horseradish peroxidase and to CD3
were from Novagen and Santa Cruz Biotechnology, respectively. Serum to recombinant SIVmac 239 Nef was raised in rabbits (
-Nef Ab; Covance) (19). Rabbit polyclonal antibody reactive with both NMT-1 and NMT-2 (
-NMT Ab) was generously provided by Benjamin Cravatt. Polypeptides were separated by SDS-12.5% polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) and electroblotted onto polyvinylidene difluoride membranes (Immobilon-P; Millipore). The membranes were incubated for 1 h in blocking solution containing Tris-buffered saline (150 mM NaCl, 50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.5] with 0.1% Tween 20, 1% bovine serum albumin, and 5% nonfat dried milk [Carnation]) and then incubated with appropriate antibodies in blocking solution at the specified dilutions (
-Nef, 1:1,000;
-T7-horseradish peroxidase, 1:5,000;
-H, 1:5,000;
-CD3
, 1:1,000;
-NMT, 1:400). Membranes were washed three times with Tris-buffered saline containing 0.1% Tween 20 and, when appropriate, were incubated for 1 h with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated goat
-rabbit immunoglobulin G antibody (Jackson Laboratories) and developed by using an enhanced chemiluminescence (Amersham) detection system as recommended by the manufacturer.
Glycerol gradient sedimentation.
Nef and associated proteins were immunoprecipitated from detergent extracts with
-H beads, eluted with H peptide, and overlaid onto a 5-ml, 10 to 30% glycerol gradient. Gradients were centrifuged at 45,000 rpm in an SW55 Ti rotor for 12 h at 4°C. Fractions (400 µl) were collected from the top of the gradient, and aliquots of each fraction were used for immunoblot analysis with
-NMT Ab,
-CD3
, and
-H MAb.
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).AH], the PxxP motif required for association with PAK (37) [239(P104A,P107A).AH], or sequences required for CD4 and CD28 downmodulation and located in the N-terminal region [239(
23-74).AH] (45). Finally, we constructed a negative control cell line expressing puromycin N-acetyltransferase selectable marker (PAC) alone.
Detergent extracts were prepared from Jurkat T cells expressing wild-type and mutant forms of AH-tagged Nef and from control cells transduced with a control vector expressing PAC alone. Nef and associated proteins were purified by sequential immunoprecipitations with
-H and then
-A epitope antibodies, followed each time by elution with the respective peptide epitope. The immunoprecipitated proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE and stained with silver nitrate. As shown in Fig. 1A, two polypeptides, one with an apparent molecular mass of approximately 65 kDa (p65) and the other with an apparent molecular mass of >220 kDa, copurified with wild-type and mutant SIVmac Nef proteins that contained an intact myristoylation signal (lanes 2 to 4). Notably, these polypeptides were absent in purifications from cells that expressed myristoylation signal-defective Nef [239(G2
).AH] and from puromycin-resistant cells that did not express 239.AH Nef (lanes 5 and 1, respectively).
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FIG. 1. Nef associates with NMT-1 in a myristoylation signal-dependent manner. (A) p65 specifically copurifies with SIVmac 239 Nef. Nef and associated proteins were isolated by use of a two-step immunoaffinity purification protocol from detergent extracts prepared from Jurkat T cells expressing AH epitope-tagged wild-type (lane 2) and mutant (lanes 3 to 5) forms of SIVmac 239 Nef. Purification from control puromycin-resistant Jurkat cells that did not express Nef is also shown (lane 1). Eluates were separated by SDS-8 to 17% gradient PAGE, stained with silver nitrate, and analyzed by LC/MS/MS. Bands corresponding to NMT-1 and SIV Nef are indicated. The bands migrating just below Nef likely are Nef degradation products. The positions and molecular masses of protein standards are indicated on the left. (B) Immunoblot analysis identifies Nef-associated p65 as N-myristoyltransferase 1. Immunopurifications from Jurkat T cells expressing wild-type (lane 3) and myristoylation signal-mutated (lane 4) SIVmac 239 Nef and from puromycin-resistant Jurkat T cells that did not express Nef (lane 2) were resolved by SDS-PAGE and analyzed by immunoblotting with -NMT Ab (upper panel) or -Nef Ab (bottom panel). Extract from Jurkat cells, which express both the NMT-1 and NMT-2 isoforms, provided a positive control for NMT expression (lane 1). The identity of the -Nef Ab reactive band indicated with an asterisk is not known.
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-Nef immunoprecipitates from Jurkat cells expressing wild-type 239.AH, myristoylation signal-defective 239(G2
).AH, and control puromycin-resistant Jurkat T cells were analyzed by immunoblotting with a polyclonal antibody that recognizes both the NMT-1 and NMT-2 isoforms of human NMT (
-NMT). Two protein bands migrating at approximately 65 and 60 kDa were detected in Jurkat detergent extracts (Fig. 1B, lane 1). Control experiments using ectopically expressed NMT-1 and NMT-2 revealed that the more intense p65 band corresponded to NMT-1, while the faster-migrating p60 comigrated with the NMT-2 isoform (data not shown; see Fig. 3). Notably, the p65 NMT-1, but not p60, isoform was detected in
-Nef immunoprecipitates from cells expressing wild-type 239.AH, and this association required an intact myristoylation signal in Nef (Fig. 1B, compare lanes 2 and 3). We concluded that SIVmac 239 Nef forms a relatively abundant and stable complex with NMT-1 in vivo. |
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TABLE 1. Nef-associated p65 is NMT-1a
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FIG. 3. N-terminal regions of HIV-1 and SIV Nef proteins associate preferentially with the NMT-1 isoform. (A) Nef associates preferentially with the NMT-1 isoform. Detergent extracts were prepared from Cos7 cells transiently expressing T7 epitope-tagged NMT-1 (T7.NMT-1) (lane 1), or NMT-2 (T7.NMT-2) (lane 2), or both NMT-1 and NMT-2 alone (lane 3) or together with wild-type (239.AH) (lane 4) or myristoylation-defective [239(G2 ).AH] (lane 5) SIV Nef or wild-type (NA7.AH) (lane 6) or myristoylation-defective [NA7(G2A).AH] (lane 7) HIV-1 Nef. Extracts were immunoprecipitated with -H MAb (IP: -H), and immunoprecipitates were resolved by SDS-PAGE and analyzed by Western blotting. NMT was detected with a MAb specific for the T7 epitope (WB: -T), and Nef was detected with H epitope-specific MAb (WB: -H) in immunoprecipitates (upper panels) and detergent extracts (lower panels). (B) The N-terminal region of Nef preferentially binds the NMT-1 isoform. Detergent extracts prepared from Cos7 cells transiently coexpressing T7.NMT-1 and T7.NMT-2 alone (lanes 1 and 5) or in combination with SIV 239.AH Nef (lane 2), HIV-1 NA7.AH Nef (lane 6), or chimeric molecules consisting of AH epitope-tagged GFP (GFP.AH) fused to the C-terminal end of the full-length SIV Nef (239.GFP.AH) (lane 3), the N-terminal 30 residues of SIV Nef [239(1-30).GFP.AH] (lane 4), full-length NA7 Nef (NA7.GFP.AH) (lane 7), the N-terminal 68 residues of NA7 Nef [NA7(1-68).GFP.AH] (lane 8), or myristoylation-defective NA7 Nef [NA7(G2A).GFP.AH] (lane 9) were immunoprecipitated with -H MAb (IP: -H). NMT and Nef were detected in the immunoprecipitates (upper panels), and extracts (lower panel) were resolved by SDS-PAGE.
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subunit of TCR-CD3 (18). To address the relationship between complexes containing Nef and CD3
and those containing Nef and NMT-1, we sedimented Nef-containing complexes in a glycerol gradient. Detergent extracts were prepared from Jurkat T cells expressing 239.AH Nef and control puromycin-resistant Jurkat cells. Nef and its associated proteins were immunoprecipitated with
-H MAb and eluted with H peptide. Aliquots of eluates were characterized by immunoblotting. As expected, NMT-1 and CD3
were readily detectable in immunoprecipitates from cells expressing 239.AH but not in those from control cells (Fig. 2, left panel).
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FIG. 2. Glycerol gradient sedimentation of complexes containing SIV Nef. Detergent extracts prepared from Jurkat T cells expressing 239.AH Nef were immunoprecipitated with a MAb specific for the H epitope (IP: -H), and bound proteins were eluted with H peptide. Nef and associated proteins were sedimented through a 10 to 30% glycerol gradient, and fractions were collected from the top of the gradient. The distribution of molecular mass standards sedimented in parallel in an identical gradient is indicated in panel A. (A) Aliquots of glycerol gradient fractions were separated by SDS-PAGE and analyzed by immunoblotting with a polyclonal antibody specific for NMT (WB: -NMT), a polyclonal antibody specific for SIVmac 239 Nef (WB: -Nef), or a MAb specific for CD3 (WB: -CD3 ). (B) The distributions of NMT, 239.AH Nef, and CD3 in gradient fractions were quantitated by densitometric scanning of the chemiluminescence images shown in panel A. A representative of two independent experiments is shown.
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as well as protein standards across the gradient are shown in Fig. 2A. The approximately 35-kDa 239.AH Nef protein sedimented more slowly than the 67-kDa standard and peaked in fractions 2 and 3. This suggested that that the bulk of the immunoprecipitated Nef was either in relatively low-molecular-weight complexes or uncomplexed. Immunoblotting with
-NMT Ab revealed that Nef-associated NMT-1 sedimented more rapidly than the bulk of Nef and peaked in fraction 4. This was consistent with the possibility that the NMT-1 binds Nef directly and that the Nef-NMT-1 complex does not contain other components. Similarly, the CD3
(16-kDa) subunit associated with Nef peaked in fraction 2. The small size of the Nef-CD3
complex suggested that other TCR:CD3 subunits were absent. This was expected since the association between CD3
and the core CD3 complex is known to be unstable under conditions used to prepare detergent extracts (45). The Nef protein is posttranslationally modified by covalent attachment of the myristoyl moiety to glycine 2, and this reaction is catalyzed by NMT. Therefore, we hypothesized that the Nef-NMT-1 complex could be a transient intermediate of the myristoylation reaction of Nef. To address this possibility, we first developed a transient-expression assay in Cos7 cells in which to study the Nef association with NMT-1.
Cos7 cells were transfected to transiently express T7-epitope tagged human NMT isoforms NMT-1 (T7.NMT-1) and NMT-2 (T7.NMT-2) together with wild-type or myristoylation-signal mutated SIVmac 239 Nef, each tagged with the AH epitopes. Nef and associated proteins were immunoprecipitated with
-H MAb from detergent extracts, and the immunoprecipitates were separated by SDS-PAGE and analyzed by immunoblotting. As shown in Fig. 3A, T7.NMT-1 migrated more slowly than T7.NMT-2 (compare lanes 1 and 2), and the two isoforms could easily be distinguished from each other (lane 3). Notably, wild-type 239.AH Nef precipitated NMT-1 more efficiently than NMT-2 (lane 4), as observed previously with Jurkat cells stably coexpressing SIVmac 239 Nef and endogenous NMT. We then asked whether HIV-1 Nef also forms a complex with NMT. We found that the HIV-1 NA7 Nef isolate also preferentially bound NMT-1 and that this interaction required an intact Nef myristoylation signal (lanes 6 and 7), as observed for SIVmac 239 Nef.
To determine whether elements other than the myristoylation signal in Nef contribute to the interaction of Nef with NMT-1, we constructed chimeric proteins comprised of the amino-terminal regions of SIV and HIV-1 Nef fused to GFP. To facilitate immunoprecipitation experiments, we tagged GFP with the AH epitopes (GFP.AH). We tested the chimeric proteins for their ability to associate with NMT-1 and NMT-2 in Cos7 cells. As shown in Fig. 3B, a short N-terminal fragment of 239 Nef consisting of only the first 30 amino acid residues was sufficient to preferentially bind NMT-1 over NMT-2 (lane 4). Similarly, the (N-terminal) first 68 amino acids of HIV-1 NA7 Nef was also sufficient to preferentially precipitate NMT-1 (lane 8). Notably, both of these Nef fragments precipitated NMT less efficiently than the full-length proteins (compare lanes 3 and 4 and lanes 7 and 8), which suggested that additional elements in Nef contribute to the interaction with NMT.
The catalytic cycle of NMT is thought to involve binding of myristoyl-CoA by NMT, which then opens the NMT substrate binding site and permits substrate binding. This is followed by the transfer of the myristoyl moiety onto glycine 2 in the substrate and the subsequent release of the myristoylated product (7). The release of the product is thought to be the step that limits the reaction rate (11). Therefore, we reasoned that if the Nef-NMT complex is indeed a transient intermediate of Nef myristoylation by NMT-1, it may be possible to modulate its abundance by altering the size of the myristoyl-CoA pool in the cell. To test this possibility, we attempted to alter the intracellular pool of myristoyl-CoA by using pharmacologic approaches, and we then measured the effects on the abundance of Nef-NMT complexes.
First, we attempted to increase the myristoyl-CoA pool in Cos7 cells transiently coexpressing NMT-1, NMT-2, and NA7 Nef. Since previous studies demonstrated that the availability of fatty acids is limiting to the synthesis of their respective acyl-CoA by fatty acyl-CoA synthetase (48, 49), we cultured cells in the presence of exogenous myristic acid (C14:0). Second, we attempted to decrease the intracellular pool of all fatty acyl-CoA species by treating the cells with an inhibitor of fatty acyl-CoA synthetase, Triacsin C (47). As controls, cells were cultured in the absence of any treatment or in the presence of lauric acid (C12:0) or palmitic acid (C16:0), which do not affect the myristoyl-CoA pool. Following the treatments, Nef was immunoprecipitated from detergent extracts and Nef-associated NMT and Nef were detected by immunoblotting.
Culture of cells in the presence of myristic acid resulted in approximately a two- to threefold decrease in the amount of Nef-bound NMT-1 compared to that in the control cells (Fig. 4A, compare lanes 2 and 4, see also Fig. 4B). In contrast, treatment of cells with Triacsin C resulted in the two- to threefold increase in the amount of Nef-bound NMT-1 (compare lanes 2 and 7). As expected, neither lauric acid nor palmitic acid had a detectable effect on the Nef-NMT association (compare lanes 2, 3, and 5). Notably, none of these treatments affected the overall expression levels of Nef and NMT-1. Thus, the abundance of Nef-NMT-1 complex was inversely correlated to the size of the myristoyl-CoA pool in the cells.
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FIG. 4. Agents that alter the myristoyl-CoA pool modulate the Nef-NMT-1 complex. (A) Cos7 cells coexpressing T7.NMT-1 and T7.NMT-2, either alone (lanes 1 and 6), or together with wild-type (wt) (NA7.AH) (lanes 2 to 5 and 7) or myristoylation-defective [NA7(G2A).H] (lane 8) HIV-1 Nef were cultured in the presence of 50 mM lauric acid (lane 3), 50 mM myristic acid (lane 4), 50 mM palmitic acid (lane 5), or 5 µM Triacsin C (lanes 6 to 8) or left untreated (lane 1). Nef-associated NMT was immunoprecipitated from detergent extracts with -H MAb (IP: -H). Immunoprecipitates and aliquots of detergent extracts were resolved by SDS-PAGE, and NMT-1 and NMT-2 were detected by immunoblotting with T7 epitope-specific MAb (WB: -T), whereas Nef was detected with H epitope-specific MAb (WB: -H). (B) Nef-associated NMT-1 and NMT-2 were quantitated by densitometry scanning of chemiluminescence images such as those shown in panel A. Mean values and standard deviations from three independent experiments are shown. Data were normalized to the NMT-1 associated with the NA7.AH Nef in untreated cells (lane 2).
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-H, beads and NMT isoforms were detected by immunoblotting. As shown in Fig. 5, NMT was readily detected in both HIV-1 Gag and Hck immunoprecipitates (lanes 3 and 4). Notably, Gag precipitated predominantly NMT-2, while Hck bound more NMT-1 isoform. We concluded that human NMTs form stable intermediate complexes with their protein substrates.
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FIG. 5. HIV-1 Gag and Hck form stable complexes with NMT isoforms. Detergent extracts prepared from Cos7 cells transiently coexpressing T7 epitope-tagged NMT-1 and NMT-2 alone (lane 1) or together with H epitope-tagged HIV-1 Gag (Gag.H) (lane 3), Hck (Hck.H) (lane 4), or, as controls, wild-type NA7 (NA7.AH) (lane 2) or myristoylation-defective [NA7(G2A).AH] (lane 5) HIV-1 Nef were immunoprecipitated with -H MAb (IP: -H), and immunoprecipitates were resolved by SDS-PAGE and analyzed by Western blotting as described in the legend to Fig. 3.
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and p62 phosphoprotein (data not shown), were readily detectable in the
-Nef immune complexes that we isolated, while others were not. We were unable to detect several of the previously implicated Nef partners despite using numbers of cells that greatly exceeded those used in the previous experiments and employing sensitive immunoblot as well as LC/MS/MS analyses. Specifically, we did not observe Nef associations with subunits of clathrin adaptor complexes, Lck, Fyn, and Vav. The inability to detect these proteins could be due to several factors, including the possibility that these associations were transient or unstable under our experimental conditions or were poorly conserved in the nef alleles that we employed. The spectrum of proteins that were shown here to copurify with AU-1-HA epitope-tagged SIV Nef (239.AH) differed from that previously reported by us for HA-FLAG epitope-tagged HIV-1 Nef (NA7.hf) (20). Nevertheless, several lines of evidence indicate that HIV-1 NA7 and SIVmac 239 Nef proteins target very similar spectra of cellular proteins and that the use of the hf epitope tag (20) results in a better recovery of Nef-associated protein complexes (A. Janardhan, B. Hill, and J. Skowronski, unpublished data). This is supported by the results of recent experiments in which SIVmac 239 Nef tagged with the hf epitope (239.hf) was expressed in Jurkat T cells and 239.hf Nef-associated polypeptides were purified by using an immunoaffinity strategy described by us previously (20). Microseqencing revealed that 239.hf Nef binds a spectrum of polypeptides that is very similar to that bound by hf-tagged HIV-1 Nef (20), including DOCK2, ELMO1, Rac, and NMT-1 (data not shown). Moreover, microsequencing of HIV-1 NA7.hf Nef-associated proteins (20) resulted in identification of seven NMT-1-derived peptides with a combined expectation score for NMT-1 of approximately 5 x 1014 (data not shown), thus indicating that NMT-1 binds Nef regardless of the specific epitope tag used. How could the use of different epitope tags at the C terminus of Nef affect the recovery of Nef-associated proteins? The AH-epitope tag is approximately 10 amino acid residues shorter than the hf tag. Thus, the AH tag is more likely to be buried in Nef-bound protein complexes, while the hf tag is more likely to be accessible to antibodies used for immunopurification. Therefore, it is not surprising that in the context of NMT-1, which binds the very N-terminal surface in the Nef molecule, both the AH and hf C-terminal tags were accessible and permitted efficient immunopurification of the Nef-NMT-1 complexes. In contrast, in the context of the DOCK2-ELMO1-Rac complex, which binds a surface located more centrally in the Nef molecule (20), only the longer hf epitope tag was available for immunopurification. Thus, it is important to use an optimal epitope tagging strategy that will not interfere with protein function and that will address potential limitations to protein immunopurification imposed by the topology of protein complexes.
We purified and characterized a novel protein complex containing lentiviral Nef and N-myristoyltransferase-1. Our data showed that the association of Nef with NMT requires an intact myristoylation signal at the N terminus of Nef and that a short N-terminal region of Nef is sufficient for binding. Nevertheless, sequence elements located downstream in Nef likely contribute to the interaction, since the association of the full-length Nef proteins with NMT was more robust than that of chimeras containing only their N-terminal regions. The fact that the intact myristoylation signal in Nef was required for NMT binding suggested that the Nef-NMT-1 complex we purified is an intermediate of Nef myristoylation. This possibility is further supported by the observation that the abundance of the Nef-NMT-1 complex is modulated by altering the myristoyl-CoA pool in the cell and that NMT isoforms also form stable complexes with other substrates. The current model of the NMT catalytic cycle is based on extensive in vitro studies of yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) N-myristoyltransferase (7). This model predicts that an increase in the intracellular myristoyl-CoA pool will facilitate substrate loading and therefore should lead to an increase in the steady-state level of a substrate-NMT complex. Conversely, a decrease in the intracellular myristoyl-CoA pool is predicted to have the opposite effect. Surprisingly, and contrary to these predictions, we observed that the abundance of the Nef-NMT-1 complex is inversely correlated with the size of the myristoyl-CoA pool. One possible explanation for this inconsistency is that the release of the myristoylated product from NMT is coupled to myristoyl-CoA loading onto the product-enzyme complex. This possibility is attractive because dissociation of the product-enzyme complex is thought to be the rate-limiting step of the myristoylation reaction (11). Alternatively, our observations may reflect differences between mechanisms of catalysis by the mammalian and yeast enzymes or levels of regulation in vivo that were not appreciated from in vitro experimentation.
Amino acid sequences of NMT-1 and NMT-2 share approximately 80% amino acid sequence identity. Notably, most divergent are the N-terminal regions, and the differences are strictly conserved among mammals. This suggests unique yet presently unknown roles for each enzyme in vivo, even though previous studies using a spectrum of peptide substrates revealed that NMT-1 and NMT-2 show similar substrate preferences in vitro (12). Therefore, it is intriguing that HIV-1 Gag detectably bound only NMT-2, while Nef displayed high preference towards NMT-1. The specific recognition of different NMT isoforms by Gag and Nef suggests that each of these two viral substrates may be myristoylated preferentially by a distinct NMT isoform in vivo. Further studies of the interactions of NMT-1 and NMT-2 isoforms with Nef and other viral and cellular protein substrates will likely reveal previously unappreciated levels of regulation of protein myristoylation. The differential recognition of NMT isoforms by viral and cellular substrates reported here suggests that development of selective NMT inhibitors that target myristoylation of specific viral substrates may be possible.
This work was supported by Public Health Service grant AI-42561.
Present address: Pritzker School of Medicine, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637. ![]()
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mediate the selective induction of T-cell receptor-CD3 endocytosis. J. Virol. 77:8116-8126.
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