Towers Greg J
MRC Centre for Medical Molecular Virology, Department of Infection, Royal Free and University College London Medical School, London, UK.
Retrovirology. 2007 Jun 12;4:40. doi: 10.1186/1742-4690-4-40.
The control of retroviral infection by antiviral factors referred to as restriction factors has become an exciting area in infectious disease research. TRIM5alpha has emerged as an important restriction factor impacting on retroviral replication including HIV-1 replication in primates. TRIM5alpha has a tripartite motif comprising RING, B-Box and coiled coil domains. The antiviral alpha splice variant additionally encodes a B30.2 domain which is recruited to incoming viral cores and determines antiviral specificity. TRIM5 is ubiquitinylated and rapidly turned over by the proteasome in a RING dependent way. Protecting restricted virus from degradation, by inhibiting the proteasome, rescues DNA synthesis, but not infectivity, indicating that restriction of infectivity by TRIM5alpha does not depend on the proteasome but the early block to DNA synthesis is likely to be mediated by rapid degradation of the restricted cores. The peptidyl prolyl isomerase enzyme cyclophilin A isomerises a peptide bond on the surface of the HIV-1 capsid and impacts on sensitivity to restriction by TRIM5alpha from Old World monkeys. This suggests that TRIM5alpha from Old World monkeys might have a preference for a particular capsid isomer and suggests a role for cyclophilin A in innate immunity in general. Whether there are more human antiviral TRIMs remains uncertain although the evidence for TRIM19's (PML) antiviral properties continues to grow. A TRIM5-like molecule with broad antiviral activity in cattle suggests that TRIM mediated innate immunity might be common in mammals. Certainly the continued study of restriction of viral infectivity by antiviral host factors will remain of interest to a broad audience and impact on a variety of areas including development of animal models for infection, development of viral vectors for gene therapy and the search for novel antiviral drug targets.
被称为限制因子的抗病毒因子对逆转录病毒感染的控制已成为传染病研究中一个令人兴奋的领域。TRIM5α已成为影响逆转录病毒复制(包括灵长类动物中HIV-1复制)的重要限制因子。TRIM5α具有由RING、B-Box和卷曲螺旋结构域组成的三联基序。抗病毒α剪接变体还编码一个B30.2结构域,该结构域被募集到进入的病毒核心并决定抗病毒特异性。TRIM5被泛素化,并以RING依赖的方式被蛋白酶体快速降解。通过抑制蛋白酶体来保护受限制的病毒不被降解,可以挽救DNA合成,但不能挽救感染性,这表明TRIM5α对感染性的限制不依赖于蛋白酶体,而对DNA合成的早期阻断可能是由受限制核心的快速降解介导的。肽基脯氨酰异构酶亲环素A使HIV-1衣壳表面的一个肽键异构化,并影响旧世界猴的TRIM5α对限制的敏感性。这表明旧世界猴的TRIM5α可能对特定的衣壳异构体有偏好,并暗示亲环素A在一般先天免疫中起作用。尽管TRIM19(PML)抗病毒特性的证据不断增加,但是否还有更多人类抗病毒TRIMs仍不确定。牛中一种具有广泛抗病毒活性的TRIM5样分子表明,TRIM介导的先天免疫在哺乳动物中可能很常见。当然,对抗病毒宿主因子对病毒感染性限制的持续研究仍将受到广泛关注,并对包括感染动物模型的开发、基因治疗病毒载体的开发以及寻找新型抗病毒药物靶点在内的多个领域产生影响。