Abstract

SERINC5 is a multipass intrinsic membrane protein that suppresses HIV-1 infectivity when incorporated into budding virions. The HIV-1 Nef virulence factor prevents viral incorporation of SERINC5 by triggering its down-regulation from the producer cell membrane through an AP-2-dependent endolysosomal pathway. However, the mechanistic basis for SERINC5 down-regulation by Nef remains elusive. Here we demonstrate that Nef homodimers are important for SERINC5 down-regulation, trafficking to late endosomes, and exclusion from newly synthesized viral particles. Based on previous X-ray crystal structures, we mutated three conserved residues in the Nef dimer interface (Leu112, Tyr115, and Phe121) and demonstrated attenuated homodimer formation in a cell-based fluorescence complementation assay. Point mutations at each position reduced the infectivity of HIV-1 produced from transfected 293T cells, the Jurkat TAg T-cell line, and donor mononuclear cells in a SERINC5-dependent manner. In SERINC5-transfected 293T cells, virion incorporation of SERINC5 was increased by dimerization-defective Nef mutants, whereas down-regulation of SERINC5 from the membrane of transfected Jurkat cells by these mutants was significantly reduced. Nef dimer interface mutants also failed to trigger internalization of SERINC5 and localization to Rab7+ late endosomes in T cells. Importantly, fluorescence complementation assays demonstrated that dimerization-defective Nef mutants retained interaction with both SERINC5 and AP-2. These results show that down-regulation of SERINC5 and subsequent enhancement of viral infectivity require Nef homodimers and support a mechanism by which the Nef dimer bridges SERINC5 to AP-2 for endocytosis. Pharmacological disruption of Nef homodimers may control HIV-1 infectivity and viral spread by enhancing virion incorporation of SERINC5.

Highlights

  • The HIV-1 Nef accessory protein is expressed early in the HIV-1 life cycle where it promotes viral replication and AIDS progression [1]

  • Using a series of Nef mutants defective for homodimer formation in cells, we demonstrated that Nef dimers enhance infectivity of HIV-1 produced from T-cell lines and donor peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC), as well as 293T cells co-transfected with SERINC5

  • We explored the role of Nef homodimerization in the down-regulation of SERINC5 and promotion of HIV-1 infectivity using a genetic approach involving Nef mutants defective for homodimer formation

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Summary

Introduction

The HIV-1 Nef accessory protein is expressed early in the HIV-1 life cycle where it promotes viral replication and AIDS progression [1]. Using a series of Nef mutants defective for homodimer formation in cells, we demonstrated that Nef dimers enhance infectivity of HIV-1 produced from T-cell lines and donor PBMCs, as well as 293T cells co-transfected with SERINC5.

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