Prion-like low complexity regions enable avid virus-host interactions during HIV-1 infection

Author:

Wei GuochaoORCID,Iqbal Naseer,Courouble Valentine V.,Francis Ashwanth C.,Singh Parmit K.ORCID,Hudait Arpa,Annamalai Arun S.,Bester StephanieORCID,Huang Szu-Wei,Shkriabai Nikoloz,Briganti LorenzoORCID,Haney Reed,KewalRamani Vineet N.ORCID,Voth Gregory A.ORCID,Engelman Alan N.ORCID,Melikyan Gregory B.,Griffin Patrick R.ORCID,Asturias Francisco,Kvaratskhelia MamukaORCID

Abstract

AbstractCellular proteins CPSF6, NUP153 and SEC24C play crucial roles in HIV-1 infection. While weak interactions of short phenylalanine-glycine (FG) containing peptides with isolated capsid hexamers have been characterized, how these cellular factors functionally engage with biologically relevant mature HIV-1 capsid lattices is unknown. Here we show that prion-like low complexity regions (LCRs) enable avid CPSF6, NUP153 and SEC24C binding to capsid lattices. Structural studies revealed that multivalent CPSF6 assembly is mediated by LCR-LCR interactions, which are templated by binding of CPSF6 FG peptides to a subset of hydrophobic capsid pockets positioned along adjoining hexamers. In infected cells, avid CPSF6 LCR-mediated binding to HIV-1 cores is essential for functional virus-host interactions. The investigational drug lenacapavir accesses unoccupied hydrophobic pockets in the complex to potently impair HIV-1 inside the nucleus without displacing the tightly bound cellular cofactor from virus cores. These results establish previously undescribed mechanisms of virus-host interactions and antiviral action.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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