Abstract
The morphogenesis of retroviral particles is driven by Gag and GagPol proteins that provide the major structural component and enzymatic activities required for particle assembly and maturation. In addition, a number of cellular proteins are found in retrovirus particles; some of these are important for viral replication, but many lack a known functional role. One such protein is clathrin, which is assumed to be passively incorporated into virions due to its abundance at the plasma membrane. We found that clathrin is not only exceptionally abundant in highly purified HIV-1 particles but is recruited with high specificity. In particular, the HIV-1 Pol protein was absolutely required for clathrin incorporation and point mutations in reverse transcriptase or integrase domains of Pol could abolish incorporation. Clathrin was also specifically incorporated into other retrovirus particles, including members of the lentivirus (simian immunodeficiency virus, SIVmac), gammaretrovirus (murine leukemia virus, MLV) and betaretrovirus (Mason-Pfizer monkey virus, M-PMV) genera. However, unlike HIV-1, these other retroviruses recruited clathrin primarily using peptide motifs in their respective Gag proteins that mimicked motifs found in cellular clathrin adaptors. Perturbation of clathrin incorporation into these retroviruses, via mutagenesis of viral proteins, siRNA based clathrin depletion or adaptor protein (AP180) induced clathrin sequestration, had a range of effects on the accuracy of particle morphogenesis. These effects varied according to which retrovirus was examined, and included Gag and/or Pol protein destabilization, inhibition of particle assembly and reduction in virion infectivity. For each retrovirus examined, clathrin incorporation appeared to be important for optimal replication. These data indicate that a number of retroviruses employ clathrin to facilitate the accurate morphogenesis of infectious particles. We propose a model in which clathrin contributes to the spatial organization of Gag and Pol proteins, and thereby regulates proteolytic processing of virion components during particle assembly.
Highlights
To establish a productive infection in host cells, retroviruses have evolved strategies that employ numerous host factors to facilitate their replication
A number of cellular proteins are found in retrovirus particles, many of which lack a known functional role
To discover potential host factors involved in HIV-1 replication, we set out to identify cellular proteins that are incorporated into HIV-1 particles, using a slightly different strategy compared to previous studies
Summary
To establish a productive infection in host cells, retroviruses have evolved strategies that employ numerous host factors to facilitate their replication. Other strategies to identify host factors that facilitate virus replication include the identification of proteins that bind to viral proteins [4] and analysis of the proteomes that are incorporated into virions [5,6,7]. While proteomic analyses of purified HIV1 or MLV particles have revealed dozens of virion-associated host proteins, no biological significance has been attached to the virion association of many of them. One such protein is clathrin, which previous reports suggest is only passively incorporated into particles [6]
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