Armitage Andrew E, Katzourakis Aris, de Oliveira Tulio, Welch John J, Belshaw Robert, Bishop Kate N, Kramer Beatrice, McMichael Andrew J, Rambaut Andrew, Iversen Astrid K N
MRC Human Immunology Unit, Weatherall Institute of Molecular Medicine, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, United Kingdom.
J Virol. 2008 Sep;82(17):8743-61. doi: 10.1128/JVI.00584-08. Epub 2008 Jun 18.
The human polynucleotide cytidine deaminases APOBEC3G (hA3G) and APOBEC3F (hA3F) are antiviral restriction factors capable of inducing extensive plus-strand guanine-to-adenine (G-to-A) hypermutation in a variety of retroviruses and retroelements, including human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). They differ in target specificity, favoring plus-strand 5'GG and 5'GA dinucleotide motifs, respectively. To characterize their mutational preferences in detail, we analyzed single-copy, near-full-length HIV-1 proviruses which had been hypermutated in vitro by hA3G or hA3F. hA3-induced G-to-A mutation rates were significantly influenced by the wider sequence context of the target G. Moreover, hA3G, and to a lesser extent hA3F, displayed clear tetranucleotide preference hierarchies, irrespective of the genomic region examined and overall hypermutation rate. We similarly analyzed patient-derived hypermutated HIV-1 genomes using a new method for estimating reference sequences. The majority of these, regardless of subtype, carried signatures of hypermutation that strongly correlated with those induced in vitro by hA3G. Analysis of genome-wide hA3-induced mutational profiles confirmed that hypermutation levels were reduced downstream of the polypurine tracts. Additionally, while hA3G mutations were found throughout the genome, hA3F often intensely mutated shorter regions, the locations of which varied between proviruses. We extended our analysis to human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs) from the HERV-K(HML2) family, finding two elements that carried clear footprints of hA3G activity. This constitutes the most direct evidence to date for hA3G activity in the context of natural HERV infections, demonstrating the involvement of this restriction factor in defense against retroviral attacks over millions of years of human evolution.
人类多聚核苷酸胞苷脱氨酶APOBEC3G(hA3G)和APOBEC3F(hA3F)是抗病毒限制因子,能够在多种逆转录病毒和逆转座子中诱导广泛的正链鸟嘌呤到腺嘌呤(G到A)超突变,包括1型人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV-1)。它们在靶标特异性上有所不同,分别倾向于正链5'GG和5'GA二核苷酸基序。为了详细表征它们的突变偏好,我们分析了通过hA3G或hA3F在体外发生超突变的单拷贝、近全长HIV-1前病毒。hA3诱导的G到A突变率受到靶标G更广泛序列背景的显著影响。此外,hA3G以及程度较轻的hA3F,无论所检查的基因组区域和总体超突变率如何,都表现出明确的四核苷酸偏好层次结构。我们同样使用一种估计参考序列的新方法分析了患者来源的超突变HIV-1基因组。其中大多数,无论亚型如何,都带有超突变特征,这些特征与hA3G在体外诱导的特征高度相关。对全基因组hA3诱导的突变谱分析证实,多聚嘌呤序列下游的超突变水平降低。此外,虽然在整个基因组中都发现了hA3G突变,但hA3F通常强烈突变较短的区域,其位置在不同前病毒之间有所变化。我们将分析扩展到HERV-K(HML2)家族的人类内源性逆转录病毒(HERV),发现两个元件带有hA3G活性的明确印记。这构成了迄今为止在自然HERV感染背景下hA3G活性最直接的证据,证明了这种限制因子在数百万年人类进化过程中抵御逆转录病毒攻击中的作用。