HIV-1 and HIV-2 Vif interact with human APOBEC3 proteins using completely different determinants

HIV-1 和 HIV-2 Vif 通过完全不同的决定簇与人类 APOBEC3 蛋白相互作用

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Abstract

Human APOBEC3 (A3) restriction factors provide intrinsic immunity against zoonotic transmission of pathogenic viruses. A3D, A3F, A3G, and A3H haplotype II (A3H-hapII) can be packaged into virion infectivity factor (Vif)-deficient HIVs to inhibit viral replication. To overcome these restriction factors, Vif binds to the A3 proteins in viral producer cells to target them for ubiquitination and proteasomal degradation, thus preventing their packaging into assembling virions. Therefore, the Vif-A3 interactions are attractive targets for novel drug development. HIV-1 and HIV-2 arose via distinct zoonotic transmission events of simian immunodeficiency viruses from chimpanzees and sooty mangabeys, respectively, and Vifs from these viruses have limited homology. To gain insights into the evolution of virus-host interactions that led to successful cross-species transmission of lentiviruses, we characterized the determinants of the interaction between HIV-2 Vif (Vif2) with human A3 proteins and compared them to the previously identified HIV-1 Vif (Vif1) interactions with the A3 proteins. We found that A3G, A3F, and A3H-hapII, but not A3D, were susceptible to Vif2-induced degradation. Alanine-scanning mutational analysis of the first 62 amino acids of Vif2 indicated that Vif2 determinants important for degradation of A3G and A3F are completely distinct from these regions in Vif1, as are the determinants in A3G and A3F that are critical for Vif2-induced degradation. These observations suggest that distinct Vif-A3 interactions evolved independently in different SIVs and their nonhuman primate hosts and conservation of the A3 determinants targeted by the SIV Vif proteins resulted in successful zoonotic transmission into humans. IMPORTANCE: Primate APOBEC3 proteins provide innate immunity against invading pathogens, and Vif proteins of primate lentiviruses have evolved to overcome these host defenses by interacting with them and inducing their proteasomal degradation. HIV-1 and HIV-2 are two human pathogens that induce AIDS, and elucidating interactions between their Vif proteins and human A3 proteins could facilitate the development of novel antiviral drugs. Furthermore, understanding Vif-A3 interactions can provide novel insights into the cross-species transmission events that led to the HIV-1 and HIV-2 pandemics and evolution of host-virus interactions. We carried out mutational analysis of the N-terminal 62 amino acids of HIV-2 Vif (Vif2) and analyzed A3G/A3F chimeras that retained antiviral activity to identify the determinants of the Vif2 and A3 interaction. Our results show that the Vif2-A3 interactions are completely different from the Vif1-A3 interactions, suggesting that these interactions evolved independently and that conservation of the A3 determinants resulted in successful zoonotic transmission into humans.

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