Abstract

The HIV capsid self-assembles a protective conical shell that simultaneously prevents host sensing whilst permitting the import of nucleotides to drive DNA synthesis. This is accomplished through the construction of dynamic, highly charged pores at the centre of each capsid multimer. The clustering of charges required for dNTP import is strongly destabilising and it is proposed that HIV uses the metabolite IP6 to coordinate the pore during assembly. Here we have investigated the role of inositol phosphates in coordinating a ring of positively charged lysine residues (K25) that forms at the base of the capsid pore. We show that whilst IP5, which can functionally replace IP6, engages an arginine ring (R18) at the top of the pore, the lysine ring simultaneously binds a second IP5 molecule. Dose dependent removal of K25 from the pore severely inhibits HIV infection and concomitantly prevents DNA synthesis. Cryo-tomography reveals that K25A virions have a severe assembly defect that inhibits the formation of mature capsid cones. Monitoring both the kinetics and morphology of capsids assembled in vitro reveals that while mutation K25A can still form tubes, the ability of IP6 to drive assembly of capsid cones has been lost. Finally, in single molecule TIRF microscopy experiments, capsid lattices in permeabilised K25 mutant virions are rapidly lost and cannot be stabilised by IP6. These results suggest that the coordination of IP6 by a second charged ring in mature hexamers drives the assembly of conical capsids capable of reverse transcription and infection.

Highlights

  • HIV builds its capsid in a two-step process

  • HIV protects its RNA genome while copying it into DNA by carrying out reverse transcription inside its capsid. This is accomplished by importing nucleotides through highly charged pores at the centre of each capsid multimer

  • We show that the metabolite IP6 coordinates both residues within the pore to drive the assembly of stable capsids capable of nucleotide import

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Summary

Introduction

HIV builds its capsid in a two-step process. As the virus assembles at the plasma membrane, the Gag polyprotein first forms a lattice comprised of immature hexamers. The processed CA protein assembles into its final structure, a conical capsid made up of hexamers and 12 pentamers. In the case of the immature hexamer there are two lysine rings, K158 and K227[1], while in mature hexamers this is an arginine ring R18 and a lysine ring K25[2]. These would not be expected at the centre of a protein assembly due to the destabilising influence of clusters of positive charge, an effect that has been shown to be the case for R18[2]

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