Infectious Diseases Unit, Sheba Medical Center, Tel-Hashomer 5265601, Israel.
Dep. Cell and Developmental Biology, Sackler School of Medicine, Tel-Aviv University, Tel Aviv 6997801, Israel.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 2018 Mar 4;497(2):804-810. doi: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2018.02.159. Epub 2018 Feb 19.
HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT) in the cytoplasm of HIV-infected cells efficiently inserts the non-canonical dUTP into the proviral DNA, and extends the dU-terminated DNA. The misincorporation of dUTP leads to mutagenesis, and uracils can down-regulate viral gene expression. However, uracilation might also protect HIV DNA from auto-integration in the cytoplasm. Tumor suppressor p53 protein, exhibiting inherent 3'→5' exonuclease activity, provides a potential host-derived repair mechanism during HIV reverse transcription for the misincorporation of various wrong nucleotides, leading to both base-base mismatches and incorporated non-canonical ribonucleotides. Since the presence of proofreading activity is essential for DNA synthesis accuracy, we elucidated the potential involvement of cytoplasmic p53 in the U-editing activities during insertion of dUTP into DNA by recombinant HIV-1 RT (using isogenic p53-proficient and -deficient HCT116 cells). The biochemical data show that p53 in cytoplasm can participate through the intermolecular pathway in a dU-damage-associated repair mechanism by its ability to remove preformed 3'-terminal dUs, thus preventing further extension of 3' dU-terminated primer during DNA synthesis by HIV-1 RT. The specific depletion of p53 from cytoplasmic lysates of repair-proficient p53-harboring cells reduced this negative effect. Accordingly, the increased abundance of p53 in nutlin-treated cells correlates with enhanced error-correction functions, namely, removal of incorporated uracil. The data substantiate the significance of p53 as a potential proofreader for removal of non-canonical dUTP from HIV DNA, thus preventing the consequences of dUTP misincorporation in cell-type specific infectivity of HIV.
HIV-1 逆转录酶(RT)在感染 HIV 的细胞的细胞质中有效地将非典型的 dUTP 插入前病毒 DNA 中,并延伸 dU 末端的 DNA。dUTP 的错配导致突变,尿嘧啶可以下调病毒基因表达。然而,尿嘧啶化也可能保护 HIV DNA 免受细胞质中的自动整合。肿瘤抑制因子 p53 蛋白具有内在的 3'→5'外切核酸酶活性,为 HIV 逆转录过程中各种错误核苷酸的错配提供了一种潜在的宿主衍生修复机制,导致碱基对碱基错配和掺入非典型的核糖核苷酸。由于校对活性的存在对于 DNA 合成的准确性至关重要,因此我们阐明了细胞质 p53 可能参与通过重组 HIV-1 RT 将 dUTP 插入 DNA 过程中的 U 编辑活性(使用同基因 p53 功能正常和缺陷的 HCT116 细胞)。生化数据表明,p53 可以通过其去除预形成的 3'-末端 dUs 的能力,通过分子间途径参与 dU 损伤相关修复机制,从而防止 HIV-1 RT 在 DNA 合成过程中进一步延伸 3' dU 末端引物。从修复功能正常的 p53 携带细胞的细胞质裂解物中特异性耗尽 p53 会降低这种负面影响。因此,在用 nutlin 处理的细胞中 p53 的丰度增加与增强的错误校正功能相关,即去除掺入的尿嘧啶。这些数据证实了 p53 作为一种潜在的校对因子的重要性,可从 HIV DNA 中去除非典型的 dUTP,从而防止 dUTP 错配在 HIV 细胞类型特异性感染中的后果。