Affiliation:
1. Department of Viral Infections, Research Institute for Microbial Diseases, Osaka University, Osaka
2. BioResource Center, RIKEN Tsukuba Institute, Tsukuba
3. Toyama Institute of Health, Toyama, Japan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) efficiently enters cells of Old World monkeys but encounters a block before reverse transcription. This restriction is mediated by a dominant repressive factor. Recently, a member of the tripartite motif (TRIM) family proteins, TRIM5α, was identified as a blocking factor in a rhesus macaque cDNA library. Among Old World monkey cell lines, the African green monkey kidney cell line CV1 is highly resistant to not only HIV-1 but also simian immunodeficiency virus SIVmac infection. We analyzed TRIM5α of CV1 cells and HSC-F cells, a T-cell line from a cynomolgus monkey, and found that both CV1- and HSC-F-TRIM5αs could inhibit CD4-dependent HIV-1 infection, as well as vesicular stomatitis virus glycoprotein-mediated infection. CV1-TRIM5α could also inhibit SIVmac infection, whereas HSC-F-TRIM5α could not. In the SPRY (B30.2) domain of CV1-TRIM5α, there was a 20-amino-acid duplication that was not present in HSC-F-TRIM5α. A chimeric TRIM5α containing 37 amino acid residues from CV1-TRIM5α, which spanned the 20-amino-acid duplication, in the background of HSC-F-TRIM5α fully gained the ability to inhibit SIVmac infection. Conversely, the mutant CV1-TRIM5α lacking the 20-amino-acid duplication completely lost the ability to restrict SIVmac infection. These findings clearly indicated that a specific region of 37 amino acid residues in the SPRY domain of CV1-TRIM5α contained a determinant of species-specific restriction of SIVmac.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
117 articles.
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