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Journal of Virology, October 2006, p. 10281-10284, Vol. 80, No. 20
0022-538X/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.00361-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
HIV Drug Resistance Program,1 Data Management Services, National Cancer Institute at Frederick, Frederick, Maryland 21702-12012
Received 21 February 2006/ Accepted 31 July 2006
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The sequence of the PPT is important for the proper generation and removal of the PPT primer by RNase H (2, 4, 5, 8). Mutations in either the 5' or the 3' end of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) PPT affect RNase H cleavage, reducing viral titer (3, 5, 8). Mutating the second and fifth guanine residues (AAAAGAAAAGGGGGG) of the G tract at the 3' end of the HIV-1 PPT strongly affected cleavage specificity in vivo (5). Altering the murine leukemia virus (MLV) PPT also affected PPT cleavage (9, 10, 11).
We previously reported that alternate PPTs affected the specific cleavages that generate and remove the PPT in a Rous sarcoma virus (RSV)-derived vector (1) (Fig. 1C). Although RSV RNase H was able to cleave the HIV-1 and MLV PPTs correctly part of the time, the specificity of the cleavage was greatly reduced; RSV RNase H consistently miscleaved the HIV-1 and MLV PPTs, causing the insertion of the first G (U3+1) of the PPT or the deletion of the first residue (A) of U3 (U31) at the two-long-terminal-repeat (2-LTR) circle junction. When the 3' A of the RSV PPT was mutated to G (RSV PPT2), RSV RNase H miscleaved RSV PPT2, leading to the deletion of the first A residue in U3 (U31). In the case of the DuckHepBFlip PPT (duck hepatitis B virus PPT in the reverse orientation), the RSV RNase H preferentially cleaved in U3 (U3+5) to cause the insertion of ATGTA; this ATGTA sequence is an exact duplication of the 5' end of the RSV U3. Replacing the endogenous RSV PPT with the alternate PPTs reduced the relative titer (the titer corrected for the amount of p27). HIV PPT, MLV PPT, DuckHepBFlip PPT, and RSV PPT2 had relative titers of 26%, 32%, 38%, and 73% of the wild-type titer, respectively. The fact that miscleavage by RSV RT generates linear DNAs with aberrant ends raises the question of how the aberrant DNAs are integrated by RSV integrase (IN).
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FIG. 1. Schematic drawing showing the structures of the RSVP vectors. (A) Sequences of the alternate PPTs. (B) Schematic representation of the circle junctions. U3 is indicated by white boxes with vertical black bars; R is indicated by black boxes; U5 is shown by white boxes with horizontal black bars; PPT insertions are indicated by a white box. The terminal sequence of U3 is shown; the PPT sequence is represented by Xs. The sites of the RNase H cleavages are indicated by black arrows. (C) 2-LTR circle junctions isolated from infected cells. (D) Schematic numbering of the nucleotide positions at the ends of the proviruses. The last nucleotide on each end of a normal provirus is number 1.
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TABLE 1. Recovery of full-length integrated viral DNA
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TABLE 2. Microhomologies at the junctions of unusual integrationa
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In 8 of the 22 DuckHepBFlip PPT proviruses, a CA sequence was present at the U3 virus/host junction (Table 1). However, the CA sequence at the end of U3 was not the canonical CA. Instead, the CA sequence (position, 6) in the ATGTA was found at the U3 end in the 2-LTR circle junctions from this mutant (the underlined GT, in the viral minus strand, is base paired with the CA of the plus strand at the end of U3). The sequence for the U3 end of these proviruses indicates that RSV IN was able to remove a single nucleotide from the ATGTA sequence at the U3 terminus and properly integrate the viral DNA (Table 1). However, there are more aberrant U3 integrations than integrations that involve this CA (14 and 8, respectively), suggesting that this sequence is not an efficient substrate for integrase. One apparently normal provirus generated a 218-bp duplication of the host sequence at the target site (Fig. S1 in the supplemental material, panel M). However, we cannot define the exact U3 junction, because the last nucleotide of the U3 LTR terminus was identical to the first nucleotide of the host DNA (Table 2, row M). In the other 13 proviruses, the U3 LTR terminus was usually deleted, and more rarely, there was an insertion of the PPT and flanking sequences. In addition, there were duplications of the host sequences at the target site, ranging in size from a few to hundreds of nucleotides (Fig. S1 in the supplemental material).
These aberrant insertions provide additional support for a model that we proposed in which RSV IN inserts the correct end of the linear DNA normally; however, the aberrant end, if it is not a substrate for processing and/or insertion by RSV IN, is apparently joined to the host DNA by host enzymes (7). This usually generates duplications rather than deletions of the host sequence, and part of the aberrant end of the viral DNA is usually lost.
The aberrant viral end/host DNA junctions often involve microhomology. When the normal end/host junctions were examined, the microhomologies that were found could be explained by the chance presence of matching nucleotides (Table S1 in the supplemental material). However, when the aberrant viral/host junctions were examined, there were microhomologies involving from 1 to 13 nucleotides between the viral and host sequences (Table 2). Although the frequency of one homologous nucleotide was not statistically significant, the frequencies of two or more homologous nucleotides were statistically significant. The probabilities (P) of obtaining the numbers of 2, 3, 4, 6, and 13 homologous nucleotides by chance were 0.0004, 0.010, 0.0061, <0.0001, and <0.0001, respectively.
Recovery of a provirus flanked by an inversion of host sequences. In one provirus derived from an infection by the RSV PPT2 mutant, the U5 LTR terminus was properly joined to chicken chromosome 2. However, only one nucleotide was removed from the U3 LTR terminus, and it was joined to chicken chromosome 2 in the reverse orientation (Fig. 2A) relative to the orientation of chicken chromosome 2 at the U5 LTR junction. The host sequences show that the two host DNA/viral DNA junctions are about 12 kb apart on chicken chromosome 2.
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FIG. 2. Provirus flanked by an inversion of host sequences. (A) Structure of a provirus. U3 is indicated by white boxes with vertical black bars; R is indicated by black boxes; U5 is shown by white boxes with horizontal black bars. Six nucleotides at the viral/host DNA junctions are shown. The orientations of the host sequences are indicated by black arrows. (B) Normal integration event. A 5- to 6-bp duplication is indicated by white boxes with vertical black bars. (C) Model for the generation of a provirus flanked by an inversion of host sequences. The deletion in the 5' LTR is indicated by a jagged black end. A host DNA is indicated by thick black lines, and a viral DNA is indicated by thin black lines. The joinings between viral DNA and host DNA are indicated by black circles.
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Direct duplications within the U3 of 5' LTR. We recovered three proviruses which contained direct duplications ranging in size from tens to hundreds of nucleotides in the U3 segment of the U3 LTR (Fig. 3). The fact that the duplications usually began near the U3 terminus and involved a microhomology at the viral DNA/viral DNA junction suggests that RT may have aborted plus-strand synthesis and then reinitiated it by using a microhomology near the U3 terminus (Fig. 3). These duplications of the U3 terminus did not interfere with the ability of viral integrase to insert these aberrant viral DNAs.
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FIG. 3. Structure of direct duplications of U3 sequences in the U3 LTR. U3 is indicated by white boxes with vertical black bars; R is indicated by black boxes; U5 is shown by white boxes with horizontal black bars. Direct duplications are indicated by white arrows, and the sizes of the duplications are shown. The detailed sequences at the junctions are shown in white boxes, and microhomologies are indicated by bold letters. Normal target duplications are indicated by black arrows.
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This research was supported by the Intramural Research Program of the NIH, National Cancer Institute, Center for Cancer Research.
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://jvi.asm.org/. ![]()
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