Abstract

Humans encode proteins, called restriction factors, that inhibit replication of viruses such as HIV-1. The members of one family of antiviral proteins, apolipoprotein B mRNA-editing enzyme catalytic polypeptide-like 3 (APOBEC3; shortened here to A3), act by deaminating cytidines to uridines during the reverse transcription reaction of HIV-1. The A3 locus encodes seven genes, named A3A to A3H These genes have either one or two cytidine deaminase domains, and several of these A3s potently restrict HIV-1. A3C, which has only a single cytidine deaminase domain, however, inhibits HIV-1 only very weakly. We tested novel double domain protein combinations by genetically linking two A3C genes to make a synthetic tandem domain protein. This protein created a "super restriction factor" that had more potent antiviral activity than the native A3C protein, which correlated with increased packaging into virions. Furthermore, disabling one of the active sites of the synthetic tandem domain protein resulted in an even greater increase in the antiviral activity-recapitulating a similar evolution seen in A3F and A3G (double domain A3s that use only a single catalytically active deaminase domain). These A3C tandem domain proteins do not have an increase in mutational activity but instead inhibit formation of reverse transcription products, which correlates with their ability to form large higher-order complexes in cells. Finally, the A3C-A3C super restriction factor largely escaped antagonism by the HIV-1 viral protein Vif.IMPORTANCE As a part of the innate immune system, humans encode proteins that inhibit viruses such as HIV-1. These broadly acting antiviral proteins do not protect humans from viral infections because viruses encode proteins that antagonize the host antiviral proteins to evade the innate immune system. One such example of a host antiviral protein is APOBEC3C (A3C), which weakly inhibits HIV-1. Here, we show that we can improve the antiviral activity of A3C by duplicating the DNA sequence to create a synthetic tandem domain and, furthermore, that the proteins thus generated are relatively resistant to the viral antagonist Vif. Together, these data give insights about how nature has evolved a defense against viral pathogens such as HIV.

Highlights

  • Humans encode proteins, called restriction factors, that inhibit replication of viruses such as HIV-1

  • To determine the antiviral effects of singledomain versus double domain A3s, we created synthetic tandem domain A3Cs, called A3C-A3C here, using both A3CS188, the variant that is most common in the human population, and A3CI188, the variant that has increased antiviral activity and is present at a low frequency in humans [17]

  • DISCUSSION human A3C can weakly inhibit HIV-1 replication, here we show that a super restriction factor can be created by linking two A3C sequences

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Summary

Introduction

Humans encode proteins, called restriction factors, that inhibit replication of viruses such as HIV-1. The apolipoprotein B mRNA-editing enzyme catalytic polypeptide-like 3 (APOBEC3; shortened here to A3) gene locus in primates encodes cytidine deaminase proteins that inhibit endogenous retroelements, such as LINE-1, and retroviruses, such as HIV-1, among other viruses, including hepatitis B virus, human papillomavirus, and some herpesviruses [1,2,3,4]. This A3 gene locus has expanded in primates to give rise to the seven members of the A3 family, named A3A to A3H [5]. Vif binds to the host factor CBF-␤ to help recruit an E3 ubiquitin ligase complex composed of CUL5, ELOB, ELOC, RBX2, and ARIH2 proteins that mediate polyubiquitination and rapid degradation of the A3s through the proteasome [13, 14]

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