Abstract

Chemical genetics is an emerging approach to investigate the biology of host-pathogen interactions. We screened several inhibitors of ATP-dependent DNA motors and detected the gyrase B inhibitor coumermycin A1 (C-A1) as a potent antiretroviral. C-A1 inhibited HIV-1 integration and gene expression from acutely infected cell, but the two activities mapped to distinct targets. Target discovery identified Hsp90 as the C-A1 target affecting viral gene expression. Chromatin immunoprecipitation revealed that Hsp90 associates with the viral promoter and may directly regulate gene expression. Molecular docking suggested that C-A1 binds to two novel pockets at the C terminal domain of Hsp90. C-A1 inhibited Hsp90 dimer formation, suggesting that it impairs viral gene expression by preventing Hsp90 dimerization at the C terminus. The inhibition of HIV-1 integration imposed by C-A1 was independent of Hsp90 and mapped to the capsid protein, and a point mutation at residue 105 made the virus resistant to this block. HIV-1 susceptibility to the integration block mediated by C-A1 was influenced by cyclophilin A. Our chemical genetic approach revealed an unexpected function of capsid in HIV-1 integration and provided evidence for a role of Hsp90 in regulating gene expression in mammalian cells. Both activities were amenable to inhibition by small molecules and represent novel antiretroviral drug targets.

Highlights

  • The AIDS epidemic is a major global health problem with an estimated 33.2 million people infected with HIV, mainly in sub-Saharan Africa [1]

  • We have found that the coumarin antibiotic coumermycin A1 (C-A1),3 a gyrase B inhibitor, impairs both HIV-1 integration and gene expression and that the two activities map to distinct targets

  • We initially hypothesized that ATP-dependent DNA motor proteins might be involved in HIV-1 nuclear import and integration, two steps where structural rearrangements of the viral DNA within the preintegration complex or host chromatin may be required [9, 10]

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Summary

The abbreviations used are

C-A1, coumermycin A1; CsA, cyclosporine A; Hsp, heat shock protein 90; cypA, cyclophilin A; GA, geldanamycin; Topo, DNA topoisomerase II; WCE, whole-cell extract; gyrB, gyrase B; ToA, time of addition; PBMC, peripheral blood mononuclear cell; m.o.i., multiplicity of infection; qPCR, quantitative PCR; KD, knockdown; pol, polymerase; VSV, vesicular stomatitis virus; 17-AAG, 17-allylamino-17demethoxygeldanamycin.

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
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