Antiretroviral APOBEC3 cytidine deaminases alter HIV-1 provirus integration site profiles

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Abstract

APOBEC3 (A3) proteins are host-encoded deoxycytidine deaminases that provide an innate immune barrier to retroviral infection, notably against HIV-1. Low levels of deamination are believed to contribute to the genetic evolution of HIV-1, while intense catalytic activity of these proteins can induce catastrophic hypermutation in proviral DNA leading to near-total HIV-1 restriction. So far, little is known about how A3 cytosine deaminases might impact HIV-1 proviral DNA integration sites in human chromosomal DNA. Using a deep sequencing approach, we analyze the influence of catalytic active and inactive APOBEC3F and APOBEC3G on HIV-1 integration site selections. Here we show that DNA editing is detected at the extremities of the long terminal repeat regions of the virus. Both catalytic active and non-catalytic A3 mutants decrease insertions into gene coding sequences and increase integration sites into SINE elements, oncogenes and transcription-silencing non-B DNA features. Our data implicates A3 as a host factor influencing HIV-1 integration site selection and also promotes what appears to be a more latent expression profile.

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Ajoge, H. O., Renner, T. M., Bélanger, K., Greig, M., Dankar, S., Kohio, H. P., … Barr, S. D. (2023). Antiretroviral APOBEC3 cytidine deaminases alter HIV-1 provirus integration site profiles. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-35379-y

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