Structural variability of the initiation complex of HIV-1 reverse transcription

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Abstract

HIV-1 reverse transcription is initiated from a tRNA3Lys molecule annealed to the viral RNA at the primer binding site (PBS), but the structure of the initiation complex of reverse transcription remains controversial. Here, we performed in situ structural probing, as well as in vitro structural and functional studies, of the initiation complexes formed by highly divergent isolates (MAL and NL4.3/HXB2). Our results show that the structure of the initiation complex is not conserved. In MAL, and according to sequence analysis in 14% of HIV-1 isolates, formation of the initiation complex is accompanied by complex rearrangements of the viral RNA, and extensive interactions with tRNA3Lys are required for efficient initiation of reverse transcription. In NL4.3, HXB2, and most isolates, tRNA3Lys annealing minimally affects the viral RNA structure and no interaction outside the PBS is required for optimal initiation of reverse transcription. We suggest that in MAL, extensive interactions with tRNA3Lys are required to drive the structural rearrangements generating the structural elements ultimately recognized by reverse transcriptase. In NL4.3 and HXB2, these elements are already present in the viral RNA prior to tRNA3Lys annealing, thus explaining that extensive interactions with the primer are not required. Interestingly, such interactions are required in HXB2 mutants designed to use a non-cognate tRNA as primer (tRNAHis). In the latter case, the extended interactions are required to counteract a negative contribution associate with the alternate primer.

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Goldschmidt, V., Paillart, J. C., Rigourd, M., Ehresmann, B., Aubertin, A. M., Ehresmann, C., & Marquet, R. (2004). Structural variability of the initiation complex of HIV-1 reverse transcription. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 279(34), 35923–35931. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M404473200

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