Abstract

BackgroundViperin, also known as RSAD2, is an interferon-inducible protein that potently restricts a broad range of different viruses such as influenza, hepatitis C virus, human cytomegalovirus and West Nile virus. Viperin is thought to affect virus budding by modification of the lipid environment within the cell. Since HIV-1 and other retroviruses depend on lipid domains of the host cell for budding and infectivity, we investigated the possibility that Viperin also restricts human immunodeficiency virus and other retroviruses.ResultsLike other host restriction factors that have a broad antiviral range, we find that viperin has also been evolving under positive selection in primates. The pattern of positive selection is indicative of Viperin's escape from multiple viral antagonists over the course of primate evolution. Furthermore, we find that Viperin is interferon-induced in HIV primary target cells. We show that exogenous expression of Viperin restricts the LAI strain of HIV-1 at the stage of virus release from the cell. Nonetheless, the effect of Viperin restriction is highly strain-specific and does not affect most HIV-1 strains or other retroviruses tested. Moreover, knockdown of endogenous Viperin in a lymphocytic cell line did not significantly affect the spreading infection of HIV-1.ConclusionDespite positive selection having acted on Viperin throughout primate evolution, our findings indicate that Viperin is not a major restriction factor against HIV-1 and other retroviruses. Therefore, other viral lineages are likely responsible for the evolutionary signatures of positive selection in viperin among primates.

Highlights

  • Viperin, known as RSAD2, is an interferon-inducible protein that potently restricts a broad range of different viruses such as influenza, hepatitis C virus, human cytomegalovirus and West Nile virus

  • Viperin has been evolving under positive selection in primates A recurring theme of host restriction factors is that they exhibit a strong signature of positive selection [24]

  • Given the remarkable breadth of viruses restricted by Viperin [5,6,14,16], we hypothesized that viperin might be evolving under positive selection

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Summary

Introduction

Known as RSAD2, is an interferon-inducible protein that potently restricts a broad range of different viruses such as influenza, hepatitis C virus, human cytomegalovirus and West Nile virus. Since HIV-1 and other retroviruses depend on lipid domains of the host cell for budding and infectivity, we investigated the possibility that Viperin restricts human immunodeficiency virus and other retroviruses. Viral infections continuously exert immense selective pressures on the host antiviral proteins to evolve adaptively. The signatures of these evolutionary conflicts can be inferred by observing signals of adaptive evolution ( called positive selection) in antiviral genes that result from repeated episodes of Darwinian selection due to past viral infections [1]. In the case of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV), Viperin has been reported to inhibit the expression of late viral gene products [14] and to enhance HCMV infectivity by remodeling the cellular actin cytoskeleton [15]

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