Zervos P, Hassell T, Van Frank R, Lai M T
Division of Molecular and Cell Biology Research, Lilly Research Laboratories, Indianapolis, Indiana 46285.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 1990 Aug 16;170(3):1061-6. doi: 10.1016/0006-291x(90)90500-m.
In E. coli cells transformed by an expression vector for the production of the protease (PR) integrase (IN) of HIV-1, three vitally encoded proteins were produced: an 11-kDa protein and a 32-kDa protein identified by immunoassays as the mature PR and IN protein, respectively, and an additional protein 15-kDa in size that reacted strongly with an antiserum recognizing a region in the carboxyl half of the IN protein. The kinetics of its synthesis indicated that it was not a degradation product of p32-IN, rather it probably arose from internal initiation at an AUG codon in the middle of the IN gene. Amino terminal sequence analysis of the first 70 residues demonstrated a perfect match with those predicted from the nucleotide sequence, beginning with the methionine codon at position 154 of the integrase gene.