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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (
HIV
)
170,526
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
HIV
-1 integrase (IN) is a validated target for developing antiretroviral inhibitors. Using affinity acetylation and mass spectrometric (MS) analysis, we previously identified a tetra-acetylated inhibitor (2E)-3-[3,4-bis(acetoxy)phenyl]-2-propenoate-N-[(2E)-3-[3,4-bis(acetyloxy)phenyl]-1-oxo-2-propenyl]-L-serine methyl ester; compound 1] that selectively modified Lys173 at the IN dimer interface. Here we extend our efforts to dissect the mechanism of inhibition and structural features that are important for the selective binding of compound 1. Using a subunit exchange assay, we found that the inhibitor strongly modulates dynamic interactions between IN subunits. Restricting such interactions does not directly interfere with IN binding to DNA substrates or cellular cofactor
lens epithelium-derived growth factor
, but it compromises the formation of the fully functional nucleoprotein complex. Studies comparing compound 1 with a structurally related IN inhibitor, the tetra-acetylated-chicoric acid derivative (2R,3R)-2,3-bis[[(2E)-3-[3,4-bis(acetyloxy)phenyl]-1-oxo-2-propen-1-yl]oxy]-butanedioic acid (compound 2), indicated striking mechanistic differences between these agents. The structures of the two inhibitors differ only in their central linker regions, with compounds 1 and 2 containing a single methyl ester group and two carboxylic acids, respectively. MS experiments highlighted the importance of these structural differences for selective binding of compound 1 to the IN dimer interface. Moreover, molecular modeling of compound 1 complexed to IN identified a potential inhibitor binding cavity and provided structural clues regarding a possible role of the central methyl ester group in establishing an extensive hydrogen bonding network with both interacting subunits. The proposed mechanism of action and binding site for the small-molecule inhibitor identified in the present study provide an attractive venue for developing allosteric inhibitors of
HIV
-1 IN.
...
PMID:An allosteric mechanism for inhibiting HIV-1 integrase with a small molecule. 1963 33
The interaction between
lens epithelium-derived growth factor
/transcriptional co-activator p75 (LEDGF) and human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) integrase (IN) is essential for
HIV
-1 replication. Homogeneous time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer assays were developed to characterize
HIV
-1 integrase dimerization and the interaction between LEDGF and IN dimers. Using these assays in an equilibrium end point dose-response format with mathematical modeling, we determined the dissociation constants of IN dimers (K(dimer) = 67.8 pm) and of LEDGF from IN dimers (K(d) = 10.9 nm). When used in a kinetic format, the assays allowed the determination of the on- and off-rate constants for these same interactions. Integrase dimerization had a k(on) of 0.1247 nm(-1) x min(-1) and a k(off) of 0.0080 min(-1) resulting in a K(dimer) of 64.5 pm. LEDGF binding to IN dimers had a k(on) of 0.0285 nm(-1).min(-1) and a k(off) of 0.2340 min(-1) resulting in a K(d) of 8.2 nm. These binding assays can also be used in an equilibrium end point competition format. In this format, the IN catalytic core domain produced a K(i) of 15.2 nm while competing for integrase dimerization, confirming the very tight interaction of IN with itself. In the same format, LEDGF produced a K(i) value of 35 nm when competing for LEDGF binding to IN dimers. In summary, this study describes a methodology combining homogeneous time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer and mathematical modeling to derive the affinities between IN monomers and between LEDGF and IN dimers. This study revealed the significantly tighter nature of the IN-IN dimer compared with the IN-LEDGF interaction.
...
PMID:Affinities between the binding partners of the HIV-1 integrase dimer-lens epithelium-derived growth factor (IN dimer-LEDGF) complex. 1980 48
Permanent integration of the viral genome into a host chromosome is an essential step in the life cycles of lentiviruses and other retroviruses. By archiving the viral genetic information in the genome of the host target cell and its progeny, integrated proviruses prevent curative therapy of
HIV
-1 and make the development of antiretroviral drug resistance irreversible. Although the integration reaction is known to be catalyzed by the viral integrase (IN), the manner in which retroviruses engage and attach to the chromatin target is only now becoming clear.
Lens epithelium-derived growth factor
(LEDGF/p75) is a ubiquitously expressed nuclear protein that binds to lentiviral IN protein dimers at its carboxyl terminus and to host chromatin at its amino terminus. LEDGF/p75 thus tethers ectopically expressed IN to chromatin. It also protects IN from proteosomal degradation and can stimulate IN catalysis in vitro.
HIV
-1 infection is inhibited at the integration step in LEDGF/p75-deficient cells, and the characteristic lentiviral preference for integration into active genes is also reduced. A model in which LEDGF/p75 acts to tether the viral preintegration complex to chromatin has emerged. Intriguingly, similar chromatin tethering mechanisms have been described for other retroelements and for large DNA viruses. Here we review the evidence supporting the LEDGF/p75 tethering model and consider parallels with these other viruses.
...
PMID:Chromatin tethering and retroviral integration: recent discoveries and parallels with DNA viruses. 1983 75
The present work describes a novel interaction between the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Rev protein and the cellular
lens epithelium-derived growth factor p75
(LEDGF/p75) protein in vitro and in virus-infected cells. Here we show, for the first time, that formation of an Rev-LEDGF/p75 complex is a crucial step in regulating viral cDNA integration. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments at various times after virus infection revealed that, first, an integrase enzyme (IN)-LEDGF/p75 complex is formed, which is then replaced by a Rev-LEDGF/p75 and Rev-IN complexes. This was supported by in vitro experiments showing that Rev promotes dissociation of the IN-LEDGF/p75 complex. Combination of the viral IN and the cellular LEDGF/p75 is required for proper integration of the viral cDNA into the host chromosomal DNA. Our findings demonstrate that integration of
HIV
-1 cDNA is regulated by an interplay between viral Rev and the host-cell LEDGF/p75 proteins.
...
PMID:Integration of HIV-1 DNA is regulated by interplay between viral rev and cellular LEDGF/p75 proteins. 1985 49
Lens epithelium-derived growth factor
(
LEDGF
)/p75 is a cellular cofactor for
HIV
-1 DNA integration. It is well established that the simultaneous binding of
LEDGF
/p75 to chromatin and to
HIV
-1 integrase is required for its cofactor activity. However, the exact molecular mechanism of
LEDGF
/p75 in
HIV
-1 integration is not yet completely understood. Our hypothesis is that evolutionarily conserved regions in
LEDGF
/p75 exposed to solvent and harboring posttranslational modifications may be involved in its
HIV
-1 cofactor activity. Therefore, a panel of
LEDGF
/p75 deletion mutants targeting these protein regions were evaluated for their
HIV
-1 cofactor activity, chromatin binding, integrase interaction, and integrase-to-chromatin-tethering activity by using different cellular and biochemical approaches. The deletion of amino acids 267 to 281 reduced the cofactor activity of
LEDGF
/p75 to levels observed for chromatin-binding-defective mutants. This region contains a serine cluster (residues 271, 273, and 275) recurrently found to be phosphorylated in both human and mouse cells. Importantly, the conversion of these Ser residues to Ala was sufficient to impair the ability of
LEDGF
/p75 to mediate
HIV
-1 DNA integration, although these mutations did not alter chromatin binding, integrase binding, or the integrase-to-chromatin-tethering capability of
LEDGF
/p75. These results clearly indicated that serine residues 271, 273, and 275 influence the
HIV
-1 cofactor activity of integrase-to-chromatin-tethering-competent
LEDGF
/p75.
...
PMID:Implication of serine residues 271, 273, and 275 in the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 cofactor activity of lens epithelium-derived growth factor/p75. 1988 64
Lens epithelium-derived growth factor
(
LEDGF
) fusion proteins can direct
HIV
-1 DNA integration to novel sites in the host genome. The C terminus of
LEDGF
contains an integrase binding domain (IBD), and the N terminus binds chromatin.
LEDGF
normally directs integrations to the bodies of expressed genes. Replacing the N terminus of
LEDGF
with chromatin binding domains (CBDs) from other proteins changes the specificity of
HIV
-1 DNA integration. We chose two well-characterized CBDs: the plant homeodomain (PHD) finger from ING2 and the chromodomain from heterochromatin binding protein 1alpha (HP1alpha). The ING2 PHD finger binds H3K4me3, a histone mark that is associated with the transcriptional start sites of expressed genes. The HP1alpha chromodomain binds H3K9me2,3, histone marks that are widely distributed throughout the genome. A fusion protein in which the ING2 PHD finger was linked to the
LEDGF
IBD directed integrations near the start sites of expressed genes. A similar fusion protein in which the HP1alpha chromodomain was linked to the
LEDGF
IBD directed integrations to sites that differed from both the PHD finger fusion-directed and
LEDGF
-directed integration sites. The ability to redirect
HIV
-1 DNA integration may help solve the problems associated with the activation of oncogenes when retroviruses are used in gene therapy.
...
PMID:Lens epithelium-derived growth factor fusion proteins redirect HIV-1 DNA integration. 2014 7
Lens epithelium-derived growth factor
(LEDGF/p75) is a cellular cofactor of
HIV
-1 integrase that promotes viral integration by tethering the preintegration complex to the chromatin. By virtue of its crucial role in the early steps of
HIV
replication, the interaction between LEDGF/p75 and integrase represents an attractive target for antiviral therapy. We have rationally designed a series of 2-(quinolin-3-yl)acetic acid derivatives (LEDGINs) that act as potent inhibitors of the LEDGF/p75-integrase interaction and
HIV
-1 replication at submicromolar concentration by blocking the integration step. A 1.84-A resolution crystal structure corroborates the binding of the inhibitor in the LEDGF/p75-binding pocket of integrase. Together with the lack of cross-resistance with two clinical integrase inhibitors, these findings define the 2-(quinolin-3-yl)acetic acid derivatives as the first genuine allosteric
HIV
-1 integrase inhibitors. Our work demonstrates the feasibility of rational design of small molecules inhibiting the protein-protein interaction between a viral protein and a cellular host factor.
...
PMID:Rational design of small-molecule inhibitors of the LEDGF/p75-integrase interaction and HIV replication. 2047 3
Lens epithelium-derived growth factor
/p75 (LEDGF/p75) is a transcriptional coactivator involved in stress response, autoimmune disease, cancer and
HIV
replication. A fusion between the nuclear pore protein NUP98 and LEDGF/p75 has been found in human acute and chronic myeloid leukemia and association of LEDGF/p75 with mixed-lineage leukemia (MLL)/menin is critical for leukemic transformation. During lentiviral replication, LEDGF/p75 tethers the pre-integration complex to the host chromatin resulting in a bias of integration into active transcription units (TUs). The consensus function of LEDGF/p75 is tethering of cargos to chromatin. In this regard, we determined the LEDGF/p75 chromatin binding profile. To this purpose, we used DamID technology and focused on the highly annotated ENCODE (Encyclopedia of DNA Elements) regions. LEDGF/p75 primarily binds downstream of the transcription start site of active TUs in agreement with the enrichment of
HIV
-1 integration sites at these locations. We show that LEDGF/p75 binding is not restricted to stress response elements in the genome, and correlation analysis with more than 200 genomic features revealed an association with active chromatin markers, such as H3 and H4 acetylation, H3K4 monomethylation and RNA polymerase II binding. Interestingly, some associations did not correlate with
HIV
-1 integration indicating that not all LEDGF/p75 complexes on the chromosome are amenable to
HIV
-1 integration.
...
PMID:High-resolution profiling of the LEDGF/p75 chromatin interaction in the ENCODE region. 2048 70
A crystal structure of the integrase binding domain (IBD) of the
lens epithelium-derived growth factor
(LEDGF/p75) in complex with the dimer of the
HIV
-1 integrase (IN) catalytic core domain (CCD) provides useful information that might help in the understanding of essential protein-protein contacts in
HIV
-1. However, mutagenic studies indicated that interactions between the full-length proteins were more extensive than the contacts observed in the co-crystal structure of the isolated domains. On the other hand, the biochemical characterization of the interaction between full-length IN and LEDGF/p75 has recently proved that LEDGF/p75 promotes IN tetramerization with two LEDGF/p75 IBD molecules bound to the IN tetramer. This experimental evidence suggests that to obtain a complete structural description of the interactions between the two proteins, the full-length tetrameric structure of IN should be considered. Our aim was to obtain a detailed picture of
HIV
-1 IN interactions with cellular co-factors that was of general interest, particularly for the development of small molecule IN inhibitors, which mimic the IBD of LEDGF/p75. To this end, we performed bioinformatics analyses to identify protein sequence domains involved in long-range recognition. Subsequently, we applied molecular dynamics techniques to investigate the detailed interactions between the complete tetrameric form of IN and two molecules of the IBD of LEDGF/p75. Our dynamic picture is in agreement with experimental data and, thereby, provides new details of the IN-LEDGF/p75 interaction.
...
PMID:Computational studies of the interaction between the HIV-1 integrase tetramer and the cofactor LEDGF/p75: insights from molecular dynamics simulations and the informational spectrum method. 2087 14
Nearly all cellular and disease related functions of the transcriptional co-activator
lens epithelium-derived growth factor
(LEDGF/p75) involve tethering of interaction partners to chromatin via its conserved integrase binding domain (IBD), but little is known about the mechanism of in vivo chromatin binding and tethering. In this work we studied LEDGF/p75 in real-time in living HeLa cells combining different quantitative fluorescence techniques: spot fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (sFRAP) and half-nucleus fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (hnFRAP), continuous photobleaching, fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) and an improved FCS method to study diffusion dependence of chromatin binding, tunable focus FCS. LEDGF/p75 moves about in nuclei of living cells in a chromatin hopping/scanning mode typical for transcription factors. The PWWP domain of LEDGF/p75 is necessary, but not sufficient for in vivo chromatin binding. After interaction with
HIV
-1 integrase via its IBD, a general protein-protein interaction motif, kinetics of LEDGF/p75 shift to 75-fold larger affinity for chromatin. The PWWP is crucial for locking the complex on chromatin. We propose a scan-and-lock model for LEDGF/p75, unifying paradoxical notions of transcriptional co-activation and lentiviral integration targeting.
...
PMID:The transcriptional co-activator LEDGF/p75 displays a dynamic scan-and-lock mechanism for chromatin tethering. 2097 33
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