Abstract

The sterile alpha motif (SAM) and HD domain-containing protein-1 (SAMHD1) inhibits the infection of resting CD4+ T cells and myeloid cells by human and related simian immunodeficiency viruses (HIV and SIV). Vpx inactivates SAMHD1 by promoting its proteasome-dependent degradation through an interaction with CRL4 (DCAF1) E3 ubiquitin ligase and the C-terminal region of SAMHD1. However, the determinants in SAMHD1 that are required for Vpx-mediated degradation have not been well characterized. SAMHD1 contains a classical nuclear localization signal (NLS), and NLS point mutants are cytoplasmic and resistant to Vpx-mediated degradation. Here, we demonstrate that NLS-mutant SAMHD1 K11A can be rescued by wild-type SAMHD1, restoring its nuclear localization; consequently, SAMHD1 K11A became sensitive to Vpx-mediated degradation in the presence of wild-type SAMHD1. Surprisingly, deletion of N-terminal regions of SAMHD1, including the classical NLS, generated mutant SAMHD1 proteins that were again sensitive to Vpx-mediated degradation. Unlike SAMHD1 K11A, these deletion mutants could be detected in the nucleus. Interestingly, NLS-defective SAMHD1 could still bind to karyopherin-β1 and other nuclear proteins. We also determined that the linker region between the SAM and HD domain and the HD domain itself is important for Vpx-mediated degradation but not Vpx interaction. Thus, SAMHD1 contains an additional nuclear targeting mechanism in addition to the classical NLS. Our data indicate that multiple regions in SAMHD1 are critical for Vpx-mediated nuclear degradation and that association with Vpx is not sufficient for Vpx-mediated degradation of SAMHD1. Since the linker region and HD domain may be involved in SAMHD1 multimerization, our results suggest that SAMHD1 multimerization may be required for Vpx-mediation degradation.

Highlights

  • Vpx is a virion-associated viral accessory protein packaged through specific interaction with Gag proteins of HIV-2 and selected SIV lineages [1,2,3,4,5,6]

  • To further characterize the determinants of SAMHD1 that are involved in Vpx-mediated degradation, we constructed a series of SAMHD1 deletion expression vectors (Fig. 1) covering the Nterminal region (D2–41, D2–109), sterile alpha motif (SAM) domain (D45–110), linker region between SAM and the HD domain (D113–136), HD domian (D162–335), and C-terminal region (1–547)

  • The C-terminal region of human SAMHD1 has been identified as a Vpx-binding domain and as important for Vpxmediated degradation [20,29,31,34,43]

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Summary

Introduction

Vpx is a virion-associated viral accessory protein packaged through specific interaction with Gag proteins of HIV-2 and selected SIV lineages [1,2,3,4,5,6]. It is essential for efficient viral replication in macrophages [7,8,9,10] and dendritic cells [11,12], promoting the accumulation of viral DNA during reverse transcription [13,14,15,16]. The effects of other regions in SAMHD1 on Vpx induced degradation have not been characterized

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