Virion Incorporation of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Nef Is Mediated by a Bipartite Membrane-Targeting Signal: Analysis of Its Role in Enhancement of Viral Infectivity

Author:

Welker Reinhold1,Harris Mark2,Cardel Bettina1,Kräusslich Hans-Georg1

Affiliation:

1. Heinrich-Pette-Institut für experimentelle Virologie und Immunologie an der Universität Hamburg, D-20251 Hamburg, Germany,1 and

2. Department of Microbiology, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, United Kingdom2

Abstract

ABSTRACTThenefgene of primate immunodeficiency viruses is essential for high-titer virus replication and AIDS pathogenesis in vivo. In tissue culture, Nef is not required for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection but enhances viral infectivity. We and others have shown that Nef is incorporated into HIV-1 particles and cleaved by the viral proteinase. To determine the signal for Nef incorporation and to analyze whether virion-associated Nef is responsible for enhancement of infectivity, we generated a panel ofnefmutants and analyzed them for virion incorporation of Nef and for their relative infectivities. We report that N-terminal truncations of Nef abolished its incorporation into HIV particles. Incorporation was reconstituted by targeting the respective proteins to the plasma membrane by using a heterologous signal. Mutational analysis revealed that both myristoylation and an N-terminal cluster of basic amino acids were required for virion incorporation and for plasma membrane targeting of Nef. Grafting the N-terminal anchor domain of Nef onto the green fluorescent protein led to membrane targeting and virion incorporation of the resulting fusion protein. These results indicate that Nef incorporation into HIV-1 particles is mediated by plasma membrane targeting via an N-terminal bipartite signal which is reminiscent of a Src homology region 4. Virion incorporation of Nef correlated with enhanced infectivity of the respective viruses in a single-round replication assay. However, the phenotypes of HIV mutants with reduced Nef incorporation only partly correlated with their ability to replicate in primary lymphocytes, indicating that additional or different mechanisms may be involved in this system.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology

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