Abstract

The human immunodeficiency virus type-1 Vif protein has a crucial role in regulating viral infectivity. However, we found that newly synthesized Vif is rapidly degraded by cellular proteases. We tested the dose dependence of Vif in non-permissive H9 cells and found that Vif, when expressed at low levels, increased virus infectivity in a dose-dependent manner. Surprisingly, however, the range of Vif required for optimal virus infectivity was narrow, and further increases in Vif severely reduced viral infectivity. Inhibition of viral infectivity at higher levels of Vif was cell type-independent and was associated with an accumulation of Gag-processing intermediates. Vif did not act as a general protease inhibitor but selectively inhibited Gag processing at the capsid and nucleocapsid (NC) boundary. Identification of Vif variants that were efficiently packaged but were unable to modulate Gag processing suggests that Vif packaging was necessary but insufficient for the production of 33- and 34-kDa processing intermediates. Interestingly, these processing intermediates, like Vif, associated with viral nucleoprotein complexes more rigidly than mature capsid and NC. We conclude that virus-associated Vif inhibits processing of a subset of Gag precursor molecules at the p2/NC primary cleavage site. Modulation of processing of a small subset of Gag molecules by physiological levels of Vif may be important for virus maturation. However, the accumulation of such processing intermediates at high levels of Vif is inhibitory. Thus, rapid intracellular degradation of Vif may have evolved as a mechanism to prevent such inhibitory effects of Vif.

Highlights

  • Based on recent reports demonstrating an interaction of Vif with APOBEC3G [17, 21, 25], we postulated that Vif enhances viral infectivity in a dose-dependent and saturable manner

  • Despite the recent identification of a cellular factor whose inhibitory activity must be overcome by Vif to allow for the production of infectious viruses from non-permissive cell types [10], the molecular mechanism of Vif function and its site(s) of action have remained unclear

  • We report for the first time on an activity of Vif that requires its presence in virus particles

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Summary

THE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY

12355–12362, 2004 Printed in U.S.A. High Level Expression of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type-1 Vif Inhibits Viral Infectivity by Modulating Proteolytic Processing of the Gag Precursor at the p2/Nucleocapsid Processing Site*. Inhibition of viral infectivity at higher levels of Vif was cell type-independent and was associated with an accumulation of Gag-processing intermediates. High Levels of Vif Inhibit Viral Infectivity tivity in non-permissive cell types in a dose-dependent manner. The amounts of Vif required for maximal effect exhibited a narrow window, and further increases in Vif levels did not result in a plateau of maximal viral infectivity but instead increasingly suppressed viral infectivity irrespective of the producer cell type. The resulting accumulation of 33- and 34-kDa Gag intermediates composed of CA-p2-NC and CA-p2-NC-p1 was found to inhibit viral infectivity These results provide evidence that virus-associated Vif has the ability to interact with Gag precursor molecules and to modulate Gag maturation. Gag maturation is a highly ordered process, and accumulation of excessive amounts of processing intermediates due to high level expression of Vif is detrimental to virus infectivity

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