Chang H C, Samaniego F, Nair B C, Buonaguro L, Ensoli B
Laboratory of Tumor Cell Biology, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
AIDS. 1997 Oct;11(12):1421-31. doi: 10.1097/00002030-199712000-00006.
To analyze the mechanisms of release and the extracellular fate of the HIV-1 Tat protein and to determine the Tat domain binding to the extracellular matrix.
Release of Tat was studied by pulse-chase experiments with Tat-transfected COS-1 cells in the presence or absence of different serum concentrations, temperatures and drugs inhibiting the classical secretion pathway or endo-exocytosis, such as brefeldin A and methylamine. The binding of extracellular Tat to heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPG) was determined by using trypsin, heparin or heparinase in pulse-chase experiments, by gel shift and competition assays with radiolabeled heparin, and by heparin-affinity chromatography. The mapping of the Tat binding site to heparin was defined by functional assays of rescue of Tat-defective HIV-1 proviruses.
Tat is released in the absence of cell death or permeability changes. Tat release is dependent upon the temperature and serum concentration, and it is not blocked by brefeldin A or methylamine. After release, a portion of the protein remains in a soluble form whereas the other binds to extracellular matrix (ECM)-associated HSPG. The HSPG-bound Tat can be retrieved into a soluble form by heparin, heparinase or trypsin. Binding to heparin is competed out by heparin-binding factors such as basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), and it is mediated by the Tat basic region which forms a specific complex with heparin which blocks HIV-1 rescue by exogenous Tat and allows purification of a highly biologically active protein.
These results demonstrate that Tat exits from intact cells through a leaderless secretion pathway which shares several features with that of acid FGF or bFGF. The released Tat binds to HSPG through its basic region and this determines its storage into the ECM, as occurs for bFGF.
分析HIV-1反式激活因子(Tat)蛋白的释放机制及其细胞外命运,并确定与细胞外基质结合的Tat结构域。
通过脉冲追踪实验研究Tat的释放,实验采用转染Tat的COS-1细胞,分别在存在或不存在不同血清浓度、温度以及抑制经典分泌途径或胞吞-胞吐作用的药物(如布雷菲德菌素A和甲胺)的条件下进行。在脉冲追踪实验中,通过使用胰蛋白酶、肝素或肝素酶,通过凝胶迁移和与放射性标记肝素的竞争分析,以及通过肝素亲和色谱法,确定细胞外Tat与硫酸乙酰肝素蛋白聚糖(HSPG)的结合。通过对Tat缺陷型HIV-1前病毒拯救的功能分析来确定Tat与肝素结合位点的定位。
Tat在细胞未死亡或通透性未改变的情况下释放。Tat的释放取决于温度和血清浓度,且不受布雷菲德菌素A或甲胺的阻断。释放后,一部分蛋白保持可溶形式,而另一部分则与细胞外基质(ECM)相关的HSPG结合。与HSPG结合的Tat可通过肝素、肝素酶或胰蛋白酶重新变为可溶形式。与肝素的结合可被肝素结合因子如碱性成纤维细胞生长因子(bFGF)竞争取代,并由Tat的碱性区域介导,该区域与肝素形成特异性复合物,可阻断外源性Tat对HIV-1的拯救,并有助于纯化具有高生物活性的蛋白。
这些结果表明,Tat通过一种无信号肽的分泌途径从完整细胞中释放出来,该途径与酸性FGF或bFGF的分泌途径有若干共同特征。释放的Tat通过其碱性区域与HSPG结合,这决定了它如bFGF一样储存在ECM中。