Abstract

Human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1) is the first retrovirus that has conclusively been shown to cause human diseases. In HIV-1, specific interactions between the nucleocapsid (NC) domain of the Gag protein and genomic RNA (gRNA) mediate gRNA dimerization and selective packaging; however, the mechanism for gRNA packaging in HTLV-1, a deltaretrovirus, is unclear. In other deltaretroviruses, the matrix (MA) and NC domains of Gag are both involved in gRNA packaging, but MA binds nucleic acids with higher affinity and has more robust chaperone activity, suggesting that this domain may play a primary role. Here, we show that the MA domain of HTLV-1, but not the NC domain, binds short hairpin RNAs derived from the putative gRNA packaging signal. RNA probing of the HTLV-1 5' leader and cross-linking studies revealed that the primer-binding site and a region within the putative packaging signal form stable hairpins that interact with MA. In addition to a previously identified palindromic dimerization initiation site (DIS), we identified a new DIS in HTLV-1 gRNA and found that both palindromic sequences bind specifically the NC domain. Surprisingly, a mutant partially defective in dimer formation in vitro exhibited a significant increase in RNA packaging into HTLV-1-like particles, suggesting that efficient RNA dimerization may not be strictly required for RNA packaging in HTLV-1. Moreover, the lifecycle of HTLV-1 and other deltaretroviruses may be characterized by NC and MA functions that are distinct from those of the corresponding HIV-1 proteins, but together provide the functions required for viral replication.

Highlights

  • Human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1) is the first retrovirus that has conclusively been shown to cause human diseases

  • RNA probing of the HTLV-1 5؅ leader and cross-linking studies revealed that the primer-binding site and a region within the putative packaging signal form stable hairpins that interact with MA

  • Infectious HTLV-1 particles are assembled with two copies of single-stranded viral genomic RNA that are reverse transcribed into dsDNA, which is subsequently integrated into the host cell genome [5]

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Summary

ARTICLE cro

Whereas BLV NC exhibited nonspecific RNAbinding activity, BLV MA forms a highly specific complex with the 5Ј end of the gRNA dimer but not with other RNAs in vitro, suggesting that MA plays a more central role in gRNA selection than NC [29] Consistent with this observation, BLV MA binds to two SL RNAs derived from the BLV packaging signal with high affinity (10 –20 nM) [30]. In contrast to NC binding, MA binding was more promiscuous with binding sites identified throughout the 5Ј-UTR, including the putative packaging signal These results support divergent roles for MA and NC proteins in the HTLV-1 viral lifecycle with potentially important implications for gRNA packaging and dimerization

Results
Discussion
Preparation of proteins and RNAs
FA binding assays
SHAPE probing
Reverse transcription and sequencing
Data analysis and RNA structure modeling
RNA dimerization assays
Determination of RNA packaging efficiency
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