4.6 Article

Perturbing HIV-1 Ribosomal Frameshifting Frequency Reveals a cis Preference for Gag-Pol Incorporation into Assembling Virions

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 96, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01349-21

Keywords

Gag; Gag-Pol; HIV; PRF; cis-acting RNA element; protease; reverse transcription; ribosomal frameshift; virion; virus assembly

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [R01AI110221, P01CA022332, R35GM118131, T32GM008349]
  2. NSF [DGE1747503, DGE-1256269]
  3. Greater Milwaukee Foundation
  4. University of Wisconsin-Madison
  5. Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation

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This study reveals the mechanisms of Gag-Pol protein incorporation into HIV-1 virions. The study found that GP is enriched in virions about 3-fold compared to cells, and viral infectivity is better maintained at subphysiological levels of GP. It was also discovered that GP is more efficiently incorporated into virions when synthesized from the same mRNA as Gag. Furthermore, virions exhibit a strong upper limit to trans-delivered GP incorporation. These results provide new insights into the importance and regulation of GP in HIV-1 virion assembly.
HIV-1 virion production is driven by Gag and Gag-Pol (GP) proteins, with Gag forming the bulk of the capsid and driving budding, while GP binds Gag to deliver the essential virion enzymes protease, reverse transcriptase, and integrase. Virion GP levels are traditionally thought to reflect the relative abundances of GP and Gag in cells (-1:20), dictated by the frequency of a -1 programmed ribosomal frameshifting (PRF) event occurring in gag-pol mRNAs. Here, we exploited a panel of PRF mutant viruses to show that mechanisms in addition to PRF regulate GP incorporation into virions. First, we show that GP is enriched similar to 3-fold in virions relative to cells, with viral infectivity being better maintained at subphysiological levels of GP than when GP levels are too high. Second, we report that GP is more efficiently incorporated into virions when Gag and GP are synthesized in cis (i.e., from the same gag-pol mRNA) than in trans, suggesting that Gag/GP translation and assembly are spatially coupled processes. Third, we show that, surprisingly, virions exhibit a strong upper limit to trans-delivered GP incorporation; an adaptation that appears to allow the virus to temper defects to GP/Gag cleavage that may negatively impact reverse transcription. Taking these results together, we propose a weighted Goldilocks scenario for HIV-1 GP incorporation, wherein combined mechanisms of GP enrichment and exclusion buffer virion infectivity over a broad range of local GP concentrations. These results provide new insights into the HIV-1 virion assembly pathway relevant to the anticipated efficacy of PRF-targeted antiviral strategies. IMPORTANCE HIV-1 infectivity requires incorporation of the Gag-Pol (GP) precursor polyprotein into virions during the process of virus particle assembly. Mechanisms dictating GP incorporation into assembling virions are poorly defined, with GP levels in virions traditionally thought to solely reflect relative levels of Gag and GP expressed in cells, dictated by the frequency of a - 1 programmed ribosomal frameshifting (PRF) event that occurs in gag-pol mRNAs. Herein, we provide experimental support for a weighted Goldilocks scenario for GP incorporation, wherein the virus exploits both random and nonrandom mechanisms to buffer infectivity over a wide range of GP expression levels. These mechanistic data are relevant to ongoing efforts to develop antiviral strategies targeting PRF frequency and/or HIV-1 virion maturation.

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