Abstract

BackgroundA critical step for retroviral replication is the stable integration of the provirus into the genome of its host. The viral integrase protein is key in this essential step of the retroviral life cycle. Although the basic mechanism of integration by mammalian retroviruses has been well characterized, the factors determining how viral integration events are targeted to particular regions of the genome or to regions of a particular DNA structure remain poorly defined. Significant questions remain regarding the influence of host proteins on the selection of target sites, on the repair of integration intermediates, and on the efficiency of integration.ResultsWe describe the results of a yeast two-hybrid screen using Moloney murine leukemia virus integrase as bait to screen murine cDNA libraries for host proteins that interact with the integrase. We identified 27 proteins that interacted with different integrase fusion proteins. The identified proteins include chromatin remodeling, DNA repair and transcription factors (13 proteins); translational regulation factors, helicases, splicing factors and other RNA binding proteins (10 proteins); and transporters or miscellaneous factors (4 proteins). We confirmed the interaction of these proteins with integrase by testing them in the context of other yeast strains with GAL4-DNA binding domain-integrase fusions, and by in vitro binding assays between recombinant proteins. Subsequent analyses revealed that a number of the proteins identified as Mo-MLV integrase interactors also interact with HIV-1 integrase both in yeast and in vitro.ConclusionWe identify several proteins interacting directly with both MoMLV and HIV-1 integrases that may be common to the integration reaction pathways of both viruses. Many of the proteins identified in the screen are logical interaction partners for integrase, and the validity of a number of the interactions are supported by other studies. In addition, we observe that some of the proteins have documented interactions with other viruses, raising the intriguing possibility that there may be common host proteins used by different viruses. We undertook this screen to identify host factors that might affect integration target site selection, and find that our screens have generated a wealth of putative interacting proteins that merit further investigation.

Highlights

  • A critical step for retroviral replication is the stable integration of the provirus into the genome of its host

  • We found that B-Activating transcription factor (B-ATF), All1 fused translocated to Chromosome 9 (AF9), Bromodomain containing protein 2 (Brd2), Enx-1, and ABT1 interacted with the truncated fragment containing both the catalytic and the C-terminal domains

  • The isolation of chromatin remodeling factors (Enx-1, AF9, Brd2, Baz2b), DNA repair proteins (Ku70 and Flap endonuclease-1 (Fen1)), transcriptional activators (B-ATF3, TFIIE-β, PRC, Ankyrin rep domain 49 (Ankrd49), Zinc finger p15 (Znfp15) and Zinc finger p38 (Znfp38)) and several distinct components of the spliceosome (U5 snRNP, U2 auxiliary factor 26 (U2AF26), Survival motor neuron (SMN), SF3a3, SF3b2, SLU7) suggest new pathways to explore in the analysis of integrase host factor interactions

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Summary

Introduction

A critical step for retroviral replication is the stable integration of the provirus into the genome of its host. A required step for retroviral gene expression and propagation is the stable integration of the double-stranded DNA viral genome into the genome of their hosts. Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) does not require disruption of the nuclear membrane to enter the nucleus, and nondividing cells are susceptible to infection [6]. The subsequent steps of integration have been well characterized in vitro: the two free 3'-OH viral DNA ends are used, in a nucleophilic attack on the host DNA, to covalently join the viral and host DNA strands, leaving a gapped intermediate with free 5'-phosphodiester viral DNA ends which presumably are repaired by host enzymes [8,9]. Significant questions remain regarding the influence of host proteins on the selection of target sites, on the repair of integration intermediates, and on the efficiency of integration

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