 |
176
Host Factors in HIV Budding
Heinrich Gottlinger*1, B Strack2, A Calistri2, E Popova1, and A Zamborlini2
1Univ of Massachusetts Med Sch, Worcester, USA and 2Dana-Farber Cancer Inst, Boston, MA, USA
|
HIV-1 budding from
the plasma membrane requires a membrane fission event to separate the fully
assembled viral particle from the host cell. The detachment of the virion is
mediated by the p6 region of Gag, which harbors the so-called late assembly
domain of HIV-1. The late assembly domain engages the host protein Tsg101, a component
of the class E vacuolar protein sorting (Vps) pathway that normally functions
in an endosomal budding event. Our results show that HIV-1 p6 additionally binds
AIP1, another class E Vps protein. AIP1
interacts both with Tsg101 and with a component of the late-acting endosomal
sorting complex ESCRT-III, which appears to be at the core of the cellular
machinery that mediates HIV-1 budding. Defective versions of AIP1 and of
ESCRT-III components block the final stage of HIV-1 release from the cell
surface, a phenotype that closely resembles that of HIV-1 late domain mutants.
In the case of the ESCRT-III component CHMP3, which is reported to interact
with phosphatidylinositol 3,5-bisphosphate, this
dominant negative activity against HIV-1 budding does not require an intact
phosphoinosite binding site. Our results support a model in which CHMP proteins
are tightly regulated by intramolecular interactions between their
differentially charged N- and C-terminal domains, and their antiviral activity
is triggered by mutations which disrupt these autoinhibitory interactions.
|