Affiliation:
1. Departments of Medicine,1
2. Microbiology & Immunology,2 and
3. Neurology,3 University of Rochester Cancer Center, Rochester, New York, and
4. Department of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, California4
Abstract
ABSTRACT
All primate lentiviruses known to date contain one or two open reading frames with homology to the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)
vpr
gene. HIV-1
vpr
encodes a 96-amino-acid protein with multiple functions in the viral life cycle. These functions include modulation of the viral replication kinetics, transactivation of the long terminal repeat, participation in the nuclear import of preintegration complexes, induction of G
2
arrest, and induction of apoptosis. The simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) that infects African green monkeys (SIVagm) contains a
vpr
homologue, which encodes a 118-amino-acid protein. SIVagm
vpr
is structurally and functionally related to HIV-1
vpr
. The present study focuses on how three specific functions (transactivation, induction of G
2
arrest, and induction of apoptosis) are related to one another at a functional level, for HIV-1 and SIVagm
vpr
. While our study supports previous reports demonstrating a causal relationship between induction of G
2
arrest and transactivation for HIV-1
vpr
, we demonstrate that the same is not true for SIVagm
vpr
. Transactivation by SIVagm
vpr
is independent of cell cycle perturbation. In addition, we show that induction of G
2
arrest is necessary for the induction of apoptosis by HIV-1
vpr
but that the induction of apoptosis by SIVagm
vpr
is cell cycle independent. Finally, while SIVagm
vpr
retains its transactivation function in human cells, it is unable to induce G
2
arrest or apoptosis in such cells, suggesting that the cytopathic effects of SIVagm
vpr
are species specific. Taken together, our results suggest that while the multiple functions of
vpr
are conserved between HIV-1 and SIVagm, the mechanisms leading to the execution of such functions are divergent.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology