Klasens B I, Thiesen M, Virtanen A, Berkhout B
Department of Human Retrovirology, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, Meibergdreef 15,1105 AZ Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Nucleic Acids Res. 1999 Jan 15;27(2):446-54. doi: 10.1093/nar/27.2.446.
The 5' and 3' ends of HIV-1 transcripts are identical in sequence. This repeat region (R) folds a stem-loop structure that is termed the poly(A) hairpin because it contains polyadenylation or poly(A) signals: the AAUAAA hexamer motif, the cleavage site and part of the GU-rich downstream element. Obviously, HIV-1 gene expression necessitates differential regulation of the two poly(A) sites. Previous transfection experiments indicated that the wild-type poly(A) hairpin is slightly inhibitory to the process of polyadenylation, and further stabilization of the hairpin inhibited polyadenylation completely. In this study, we tested wild-type and mutant transcripts with poly(A) hairpin structures of differing thermodynamic stabilities for the in vitro binding of polyadenylation factors. Mutant transcripts with a destabilized hairpin efficiently bound the polyadenylation factors, which were provided either as purified proteins or as nuclear extract. The RNA mutant with a stabilized hairpin did not form this 'poly(A) complex'. Additional mutations that repair the stability of this hairpin restored the binding capacity. Thus, an inverse correlation was measured between the stability of the poly(A) hairpin and its ability to interact with polyadenylation factors. The wild-type HIV-1 transcript bound the polyadenylation factors suboptimally, but full activity was obtained in the presence of the USE enhancer element that is uniquely present upstream of the 3' poly(A) site. We also found that sequences of the HIV-1 leader, which are uniquely present downstream of the 5' poly(A) site, inhibit formation of the poly(A) complex. This inhibition could not be ascribed to a specific leader sequence, as we measured a gradual loss of complex formation with increasing leader length. We will discuss the regulatory role of RNA structure and the repressive effect of leader sequences in the context of differential HIV-1 polyadenylation.
HIV-1转录本的5'端和3'端在序列上是相同的。这个重复区域(R)折叠形成一种茎环结构,被称为聚腺苷酸发夹,因为它包含聚腺苷酸化或聚(A)信号:AAUAAA六聚体基序、切割位点以及富含GU的下游元件的一部分。显然,HIV-1基因表达需要对两个聚(A)位点进行差异调节。先前的转染实验表明,野生型聚腺苷酸发夹对聚腺苷酸化过程有轻微抑制作用,而发夹结构的进一步稳定则完全抑制了聚腺苷酸化。在本研究中,我们测试了具有不同热力学稳定性的聚腺苷酸发夹结构的野生型和突变型转录本与聚腺苷酸化因子的体外结合情况。发夹结构不稳定的突变型转录本能够有效地结合聚腺苷酸化因子,这些因子可以作为纯化蛋白或核提取物提供。发夹结构稳定的RNA突变体则不能形成这种“聚(A)复合物”。修复该发夹稳定性的其他突变恢复了结合能力。因此,我们测定了聚腺苷酸发夹的稳定性与其与聚腺苷酸化因子相互作用能力之间呈负相关。野生型HIV-1转录本与聚腺苷酸化因子的结合并不理想,但在3'聚(A)位点上游独特存在的USE增强子元件存在的情况下可获得完全活性。我们还发现,5'聚(A)位点下游独特存在的HIV-1前导序列会抑制聚(A)复合物的形成。这种抑制不能归因于特定的前导序列,因为我们发现随着前导序列长度的增加,复合物形成会逐渐减少。我们将在HIV-1聚腺苷酸化差异的背景下讨论RNA结构的调节作用以及前导序列的抑制作用。