Cellular APOBEC3G restricts HIV-1 infection in resting CD4+ T cells

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Cellular APOBEC3G restricts HIV-1 infection in resting CD4+ T cells
المؤلفون: Ya-Lin Chiu, Jason F. Kreisberg, Vanessa B. Soros, Wes Yonemoto, Kim Stopak, Warner C. Greene
المصدر: Nature. 435(7038)
سنة النشر: 2004
مصطلحات موضوعية: CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes, Cytoplasm, Gene Products, vif, Molecular Sequence Data, Somatic hypermutation, HIV Infections, APOBEC-3G Deaminase, Nucleoside Deaminases, Biology, Lymphocyte Activation, Virus Replication, Genes, env, Cell Line, Interleukin 21, Ribonucleases, Cytidine Deaminase, vif Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus, Cytotoxic T cell, Humans, Amino Acid Sequence, APOBEC3G, Cell Proliferation, Multidisciplinary, Base Sequence, Ubiquitin, virus diseases, Proteins, T lymphocyte, Cytidine deaminase, Virology, Molecular biology, Deoxycytidine deaminase, Enzyme Activation, Molecular Weight, Repressor Proteins, Cell culture, Organ Specificity, Multiprotein Complexes, HIV-1, RNA Interference, Mitogens
الوصف: In contrast to activated CD4+ T cells, resting human CD4+ T cells circulating in blood are highly resistant to infection with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Whether the inability of HIV to infect these resting CD4+ T cells is due to the lack of a key factor, or alternatively reflects the presence of an efficient mechanism for defence against HIV, is not clear. Here we show that the anti-retroviral deoxycytidine deaminase APOBEC3G strongly protects unstimulated peripheral blood CD4+ T cells against HIV-1 infection. In activated CD4+ T cells, cytoplasmic APOBEC3G resides in an enzymatically inactive, high-molecular-mass (HMM) ribonucleoprotein complex that converts to an enzymatically active low-molecular-mass (LMM) form after treatment with RNase. In contrast, LMM APOBEC3G predominates in unstimulated CD4+ T cells, where HIV-1 replication is blocked and reverse transcription is impaired. Mitogen activation induces the recruitment of LMM APOBEC3G into the HMM complex, and this correlates with a sharp increase in permissivity for HIV infection in these stimulated cells. Notably, when APOBEC3G-specific small interfering RNAs are introduced into unstimulated CD4+ T cells, the early replication block encountered by HIV-1 is greatly relieved. Thus, LMM APOBEC3G functions as a potent post-entry restriction factor for HIV-1 in unstimulated CD4+ T cells. Surprisingly, sequencing of the reverse transcripts slowly formed in unstimulated CD4+ T cells reveals only low levels of dG dA hypermutation, raising the possibility that the APOBEC3G-restricting activity may not be strictly dependent on deoxycytidine deamination
تدمد: 1476-4687
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::4e59650fb6d05c9342ada79a9a8cc30a
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20613846
Rights: CLOSED
رقم الانضمام: edsair.doi.dedup.....4e59650fb6d05c9342ada79a9a8cc30a
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE