Abstract

BackgroundThe human myxovirus-resistance protein B (MxB, also called Mx2) was recently reported to inhibit HIV-1 infection by impeding the nuclear import and integration of viral DNA. However, it is currently unknown whether there exist MxB-resistant HIV-1 strains in the infected individuals. Answer to this question should address whether MxB exerts an inhibitory pressure on HIV-1 in vivo and whether HIV-1 has evolved to evade MxB inhibition.FindingsWe have examined ten transmitted founder (T/F) HIV-1 strains for their sensitivity to MxB inhibition by infecting CD4+ T cell lines SupT1 and PM1 that were stably transduced to express MxB. Two T/F stains, CH040.c and RHPA.c, were found resistant and this resistance phenotype was mapped to the amino acid positions 87 and 208 in viral capsid. The H87Q mutation is located in the cyclophilin A (CypA) binding loop and has a prevalence of 21% in HIV-1 sequences registered in HIV database. This finding prompted us to test other frequent amino acid variants in the CypA-binding region and the results revealed MxB-resistant mutations at amino acid positions 86, 87, 88 and 92 in capsid. All these mutations diminished the interaction of HIV-1 capsid with CypA.ConclusionsOur results demonstrate the existence of MxB-resistant T/F HIV-1 strains. The high prevalence of MxB-resistant mutations in the CypA-binding loop indicates the significant selective pressure of MxB on HIV-1 replication in vivo especially given that this viral resistance mechanism operates at expense of losing CypA.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12977-014-0129-1) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The human myxovirus-resistance protein B (MxB, called Mx2) was recently reported to inhibit HIV-1 infection by impeding the nuclear import and integration of viral DNA

  • Our results demonstrate the existence of MxB-resistant transmitted founder (T/F) HIV-1 strains

  • The high prevalence of MxB-resistant mutations in the cyclophilin A (CypA)-binding loop indicates the significant selective pressure of MxB on HIV-1 replication in vivo especially given that this viral resistance mechanism operates at expense of losing CypA

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Summary

Introduction

The human myxovirus-resistance protein B (MxB, called Mx2) was recently reported to inhibit HIV-1 infection by impeding the nuclear import and integration of viral DNA. The wild type NL4-3 and mutated viral DNA were transfected into HEK293T cells to produce progeny virus particles. This prompted us to test the resistance of other major amino acid variants in the CypA-binding loop, including V86A (4.2%), V86Q (1.0%), H87P (1.1%), A88V (0.1%), I91V (26.9%), A92P (27.4%), M96I (14%) and M96L (6.2%) (Figure 2A).

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