HIV-1 nuclear import is selective and depends on both capsid elasticity and nuclear pore adaptability

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Abstract

Lentiviruses, such as HIV-1, infect non-dividing cells by traversing the nuclear pore complex (NPC); however, the detailed molecular processes remain unclear. Here we reconstituted functional HIV-1 nuclear import using permeabilized T cells and isolated HIV-1 cores, which significantly increases import events, and developed an integrated three-dimensional cryo-correlative workflow to specifically target and image 1,489 native HIV-1 cores at 4 distinct nuclear import stages using cryo-electron tomography. We found HIV-1 nuclear import depends on both capsid elasticity and nuclear pore adaptability. The NPC acts as a selective filter, preferentially importing smaller cores, while expanding and deforming to accommodate their passage. Brittle mutant cores fail to enter the NPC, while CPSF6-binding-deficient cores enter but stall within the NPC, leading to impaired nuclear import. This study uncovers the interplay between the HIV-1 core and the NPC and provides a framework to dissect HIV-1 nuclear import and downstream events, such as uncoating and integration.

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Hou, Z., Shen, Y., Fronik, S., Shen, J., Shi, J., Xu, J., … Zhang, P. (2025). HIV-1 nuclear import is selective and depends on both capsid elasticity and nuclear pore adaptability. Nature Microbiology, 10(8), 1868–1885. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41564-025-02054-z

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