Hiv-1 vpr antagonizes innate immune activation by targeting karyopherin-mediated nf-κb/irf3 nuclear transport

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Abstract

HIV-1 must replicate in cells that are equipped to defend themselves from infection through intracellular innate immune systems. HIV-1 evades innate immune sensing through encapsidated DNA synthesis and encodes accessory genes that antagonize specific antiviral effectors. Here, we show that both particle associated, and expressed HIV-1 Vpr, antagonize the stimulatory effect of a variety of pathogen associated molecular patterns by inhibiting IRF3 and NF-kB nuclear transport. Phosphorylation of IRF3 at S396, but not S386, was also inhibited. We propose that, rather than promoting HIV-1 nuclear import, Vpr interacts with karyopherins to disturb their import of IRF3 and NF-κB to promote replication in macrophages. Concordantly, we demonstrate Vpr-dependent rescue of HIV-1 replication in human macrophages from inhibition by cGAMP, the product of activated cGAS. We propose a model that unifies Vpr manipulation of nuclear import and inhibition of innate immune activation to promote HIV-1 replication and transmission.

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APA

Khan, H., Sumner, R. P., Rasaiyaah, J., Tan, C. P., Rodriguez-Plata, M. T., Van Tulleken, C., … Towers, G. J. (2020). Hiv-1 vpr antagonizes innate immune activation by targeting karyopherin-mediated nf-κb/irf3 nuclear transport. ELife, 9, 1–29. https://doi.org/10.7554/ELIFE.60821

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