Abstract

The Vif protein of HIV-1 allows virus replication by degrading several members of the host-encoded APOBEC3 family of DNA cytosine deaminases. Polymorphisms in both host APOBEC3 genes and the viral vif gene have the potential to impact the extent of virus replication among individuals. The most genetically diverse of the seven human APOBEC3 genes is APOBEC3H with seven known haplotypes. Overexpression studies have shown that a subset of these variants express stable and active proteins, whereas the others encode proteins with a short half-life and little, if any, antiviral activity. We demonstrate that these stable/unstable phenotypes are an intrinsic property of endogenous APOBEC3H proteins in primary CD4+ T lymphocytes and confer differential resistance to HIV-1 infection in a manner that depends on natural variation in the Vif protein of the infecting virus. HIV-1 with a Vif protein hypo-functional for APOBEC3H degradation, yet fully able to counteract APOBEC3D, APOBEC3F, and APOBEC3G, was susceptible to restriction and hypermutation in stable APOBEC3H expressing lymphocytes, but not in unstable APOBEC3H expressing lymphocytes. In contrast, HIV-1 with hyper-functional Vif counteracted stable APOBEC3H proteins as well as all other endogenous APOBEC3s and replicated to high levels. We also found that APOBEC3H protein levels are induced over 10-fold by infection. Finally, we found that the global distribution of stable/unstable APOBEC3H haplotypes correlates with the distribution a critical hyper/hypo-functional Vif amino acid residue. These data combine to strongly suggest that stable APOBEC3H haplotypes present as in vivo barriers to HIV-1 replication, that Vif is capable of adapting to these restrictive pressures, and that an evolutionary equilibrium has yet to be reached.

Highlights

  • The human APOBEC3 (A3) family of DNA cytosine deaminases is encoded by seven genes arranged in tandem on chromosome 22

  • Several lines of evidence indicate that A3D, A3F, A3G, and A3H contribute to HIV-1 restriction by packaging into assembling virus particles and, upon virus entry into new target cells, deaminating viral cDNA cytosines to uracils and impeding the progression of reverse transcription

  • We found that endogenous APOBEC3H haplotypes yield stable or unstable proteins and that stable APOBEC3H is induced during viral infection and restricts the replication of isolates with naturally occurring hypofunctional but not hyper-functional Vif alleles

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Summary

Introduction

The human APOBEC3 (A3) family of DNA cytosine deaminases is encoded by seven genes arranged in tandem on chromosome 22 (reviewed by [1,2]). HIV-1 Vif assembles an E3 ligase complex comprised of CBF-b, ELOB, ELOC, CUL5, and RBX2 to mediate the poly-ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation of restrictive A3s ([5,6] and references therein). This process enables HIV-1 to replicate in its main target cell, CD4+ T lymphocytes, which express multiple A3s and would

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