Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0021051 (immunodeficiency)
71,517 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The modulation of plasma membrane proteins involved in the communication with the immune system is a general mechanism developed by viruses to escape the immune response. Most of the studied examples have focused on viral proteins that missort cellular proteins during their biosynthesis. However, an increasing number of examples show that the down-modulation can also be achieved after membrane delivery by targeting into the endocytic pathway. For both human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and Kaposi sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (KSHV), the proteins required for this process are identified, Nef and K3/K5 respectively. The extensive studies in this field have shown that the mechanisms by which these proteins "parasite" the endocytic pathway are completely different. Nef directly interacts with components of the cellular machinery involved in the vesicular transport between the endocytic compartments, mainly the clathrin adaptor complexes (AP), inducing the misrouting of numerous cellular proteins, including CD4, MHC-I, LIGHT, DC-SIGN, CD28 and MHC-II to the endosomal degradation compartment or the trans Golgi-network. The K3 and K5 proteins from KSHV act by inducing the ubiquitylation of the target proteins, such as CMH-I and B7.2, triggering their internalization and subsequent degradation by the highly conserved Tsg101/vps23 ubiquitin-dependent endosomal pathway. While these findings show that the strategies used by viruses to target cellular proteins to the endocytic pathway are extremely diverse, additional investigations are needed for the complete understanding of the specific roles of Nef and K3/K5 in the physiopathology of HIV and KSHV infections, respectively. In addition, these viral factors represent valuable tools to study the pathway they are perturbing.
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PMID:[The HIV nef and the Kaposi-sarcoma-associated virus K3/K5 proteins: "parasites"of the endocytosis pathway]. 1283 98

The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) encodes a potent transactivator, Tat, which functions through binding to a short leader RNA, called transactivation responsive element (TAR). Recent studies suggest that Tat activates the HIV-1 long terminal repeat (LTR), mainly by adapting co-activator complexes, such as p300, PCAF and the positive transcription elongation factor P-TEFb, to the promoter. Here, we show that the proto-oncoprotein Hdm2 interacts with Tat and mediates its ubiquitination in vitro and in vivo. In addition, Hdm2 is a positive regulator of Tat-mediated transactivation, indicating that the transcriptional properties of Tat are stimulated by ubiquitination. Fusion of ubiquitin to Tat bypasses the requirement of Hdm2 for efficient transactivation, supporting the notion that ubiquitin has a non-proteolytic function in Tat-mediated transactivation.
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PMID:A non-proteolytic role for ubiquitin in Tat-mediated transactivation of the HIV-1 promoter. 1288 54

The structural precursor polyprotein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1, Pr55(gag), contains a proline-rich motif (PTAP) called the "late domain" in its C-terminal p6 region that directs release of mature virus-like particles (VLPs) from the plasma membranes of gag-transfected COS-1 cells. The motif binds Tsg101 (vacuolar protein-sorting protein 23, or Vps23), which functions in endocytic trafficking. Here, we show that accumulation of the wild-type (wt) Gag precursor in a fraction of COS-1 cytoplasm enriched in multivesicular bodies and small particulate components of the plasma membrane (P100) is p6 dependent. Cleavage intermediates and mature CA mainly partitioned with more rapidly sedimenting larger material enriched in components of lysosomes and early endosomes (P27), and this also was p6 dependent. Expression of truncated or full-length Tsg101 proteins interfered with VLP assembly and Gag accumulation in the P100 fraction. This correlated with reduced accumulation of Gag tagged with green fluorescent protein (Gag-GFP) at the plasma membrane and colocalization with the tagged Tsg101 in perinuclear early endosomes, as visualized by confocal microscopy. Fractionation analysis and confocal examination both indicated that the N-terminal region of Tsg101, which contains binding sites for PTAP and ubiquitin (Ub), was required for Gag trafficking to the plasma membrane. Expression of FLAG-tagged Tsg101 with a deletion in the Ub-binding pocket inhibited VLP release almost completely and to a significantly greater extent than expression of the wt tagged Tsg101 protein or Tsg101-FLAG containing a deletion in the PTAP-binding region. The results demonstrate that Gag associates with endosomal trafficking compartments and indicate that efficient release of virus particles from the plasma membrane requires both the PTAP- and Ub-binding functions of Tsg101 to recruit the cellular machinery required for budding.
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PMID:Tsg101 control of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 Gag trafficking and release. 1291 33

Viruses must overcome diverse intracellular defense mechanisms to establish infection. The Vif (virion infectivity factor) protein of human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) acts by overcoming the antiviral activity of APOBEC3G (CEM15), a cytidine deaminase that induces G to A hypermutation in newly synthesized viral DNA. In the absence of Vif, APOBEC3G incorporation into virions renders HIV-1 non-infectious. We report here that Vif counteracts the antiviral activity of APOBEC3G by targeting it for destruction by the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. Vif forms a complex with APOBEC3G and enhances APOBEC3G ubiquitination, resulting in reduced steady-state APOBEC3G levels and a decrease in protein half-life. Furthermore, Vif-dependent degradation of APOBEC3G is blocked by proteasome inhibitors or ubiquitin mutant K48R. A mutation of highly conserved cysteines or the deletion of a conserved SLQ(Y/F)LA motif in Vif results in mutants that fail to induce APOBEC3G degradation and produce non-infectious HIV-1; however, mutations of conserved phosphorylation sites in Vif that impair viral replication do not affect APOBEC3G degradation, suggesting that Vif is important for other functions in addition to inducing proteasomal degradation of APOBEC3G. Vif is monoubiquitinated in the absence of APOBEC3G but is polyubiquitinated and rapidly degraded when APOBEC3G is coexpressed, suggesting that coexpression accelerates the degradation of both proteins. These results suggest that Vif functions by targeting APOBEC3G for degradation via the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway and implicate the proteasome as a site of dynamic interplay between microbial and cellular defenses.
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PMID:Vif overcomes the innate antiviral activity of APOBEC3G by promoting its degradation in the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. 1467 28

Many enveloped viruses encode late assembly domains, or L domains, that facilitate virion egress. PTAP-type L domains act by recruiting the ESCRT-I (endosomal sorting complex required for transport I) component Tsg101, and YPXL/LXXLF-type L domains recruit AIP-1/ALIX, both of which are class E vacuolar protein sorting (VPS) factors, normally required for the generation of vesicles within endosomes. The binding cofactors for PPXY-type L domains have not been unambiguously resolved but may include Nedd4-like ubiquitin ligases. Largely because they act as autonomous binding sites for host factors, L domains are generally transferable and active in a context-independent manner. Ebola virus matrix protein (EbVP40) contains two overlapping L-domain motifs within the sequence ILPTAPPEYMEA. Here, we show that both motifs are required for efficient EbVP40 budding. However, upon transplantation into two different retroviral contexts, the relative contributions of the PTAP and PPEY motifs differ markedly. In a murine leukemia virus carrying the EbVP40 sequence, both motifs contributed to overall L domain activity, and budding proceeded in a partly Tsg101-independent manner. Conversely, when transplanted into the context of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), EbVP40 L-domain activity was entirely due to a PTAP-Tsg101 interaction. In fact, a number of PPXY-type L domains were inactive in the context of HIV-1. Surprisingly, PTAP and YPXL-type L domains that simulated HIV-1 budding reduced the amount of ubiquitin conjugated to Gag, while inactive PPXY-type L domains increased Gag ubiquitination. These observations suggest that active L domains recruit deubiquitinating enzymes as a consequence of class E VPS factor recruitment. Moreover, context-dependent L-domain function may reflect distinct requirements for host functions during the morphogenesis of different viral particles or the underlying presence of additional, as yet undiscovered L domains.
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PMID:Context-dependent effects of L domains and ubiquitination on viral budding. 1514 Sep 52

The transactivator protein, Tat, is a potential candidate for developing a vaccine against human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1). Since Tat is not immunodominant, especially when delivered as a genetic vaccine, we expressed codon-optimized subtype-C Tat as a molecular conjugate of ubiquitin, to elicit antigen-specific cell-mediated immune responses. Immunization of mice with different ubiquitin-Tat constructs elicited a strong cellular, but not a humoral, immune response. The combination of codon-optimization and ubiquitin-mediated processing of Tat induced a Th-1 type cellular immune response that was detectable without in vitro stimulation, suggesting its potential utility for destruction of virus-infected cells via CTL-mediated lysis. Preliminary attempts at characterizing the immunodominant regions identified a novel T-helper epitope within the core domain of Tat.
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PMID:Codon optimization and ubiquitin conjugation of human immunodeficiency virus-1 Tat lead to enhanced cell-mediated immune responses. 1519 84

Two neuropathological changes that are linked with biological and pathological aging were examined in subjects with end-stage acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Autopsy brain specimens were examined from 25 people who died from complications of AIDS and 25 comparison subjects who were human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-negative, matched for age, gender, ethnicity, and postmortem time interval. These adults were stratified into three age groups: elderly (62 to 75 years), intermediate (55 to 60 years), and young (21 to 42 years). Ubiquitin-stained dotlike deposits (Ub-dots) and diffuse extracellular plaques containing the beta-amyloid (Abeta) fragment of the amyloid precursor protein (Abeta plaque) were both increased significantly in the hippocampal formation of older subjects. In subjects with AIDS, Ub-dots were increased whereas Abeta plaque counts were not significantly different. Western blotting confirmed that high-molecular-weight ubiquitin-protein conjugates (HMW-Ub-conj) were increased in AIDS. The band intensity of one HMW-Ub-conj species with an approximate molecular mass of 145 kDa was correlated significantly with increased acute phase inflammatory protein (a-1-antichymotrypsin) and decreased synaptophysin and growth-associated protein-43 band intensities. These results raise the possibility that HIV-related brain inflammation disturbs neuronal protein turnover through the ubiquitin-proteasome apparatus, and might increase the prevalence of age-associated neurodegenerative diseases by decreasing synaptic protein turnover through the proteasome.
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PMID:Brain aging in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome: increased ubiquitin-protein conjugate is correlated with decreased synaptic protein but not amyloid plaque accumulation. 1520 28

The multivesicular-body (MVB) pathway delivers transmembrane proteins and lipids to the lumen of the endosome. The multivesicular-body sorting pathway has crucial roles in growth-factor-receptor downregulation, developmental signalling, regulation of the immune response and the budding of certain enveloped viruses such as human immunodeficiency virus. Ubiquitination is a signal for sorting into the MVB pathway, which also requires the functions of three protein complexes, termed ESCRT-I, -II and -III (endosomal sorting complex required for transport). Here we report the crystal structure of the core of the yeast ESCRT-II complex, which contains one molecule of the Vps protein Vps22, the carboxy-terminal domain of Vps36 and two molecules of Vps25, and has the shape of a capital letter 'Y'. The amino-terminal coiled coil of Vps22 and the flexible linker leading to the ubiquitin-binding NZF domain of Vps36 both protrude from the tip of one branch of the 'Y'. Vps22 and Vps36 form nearly equivalent interactions with the two Vps25 molecules at the centre of the 'Y'. The structure suggests how ubiquitinated cargo could be passed between ESCRT components of the MVB pathway through the sequential transfer of ubiquitinated cargo from one complex to the next.
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PMID:Structure of the ESCRT-II endosomal trafficking complex. 1532 33

The p6 domain of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Gag polyprotein mediates virion budding from infected cells via protein-protein contacts with the class E vacuolar protein sorting factors, Tsg101 and AIP1/ALIX. Interaction with Tsg101 is strengthened by covalent attachment of monovalent ubiquitin to HIV-1 p6. To identify additional host factors that bind to HIV-1 p6, a human cDNA library was screened in the yeast two-hybrid system. HIV-1 p6 was found to interact with small ubiquitin-like modifier 1 (SUMO-1) as well as the E2 SUMO-1 transfer enzyme, Ubc9. Interaction with p6 was also detected with Daxx, a cellular protein to which SUMO-1 is sometimes covalently attached. SUMO-1 was incorporated into HIV-1 virions where it was protected within the virion membrane from digestion by exogenous protease. Of the two lysine residues in p6, lysine 27 uniquely served as a site of covalent SUMO-1 attachment. As previously reported, though, HIV-1 bearing the p6-K27R mutation replicated just like the wild type. Overproduction of SUMO-1 in HIV-1 producer cells had no apparent effect on virion release or on virion protein or RNA content. Infectivity of the resulting virions, though, was decreased, with the defect occurring after membrane fusion, at the time of viral cDNA synthesis. HIV-1 bearing the p6-K27R mutation was insensitive to SUMO-1 overexpression, suggesting that covalent attachment of SUMO-1 to p6 is detrimental to HIV-1 replication.
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PMID:Covalent modification of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 p6 by SUMO-1. 1561 19

Protein transduction domains (PTDs) are promising tools for transducing presynthesized polypeptides across the plasma membrane. However, the development and optimization of PTDs are hampered by many technical problems and artifacts resulting notably from the tight binding of PTDs to the cell surface and the difficulty in discriminating, through imagery analyses, truly cytosolic from cytoplasmic vesicular compartments. To circumvent these problems, we have developed an unambiguous enzymatic assay of the cytosolic uptake of PTD-driven proteins, based on the processing by ubiquitin-specific C-terminal proteases (DUBs). This method, coupled with fluorometry and fluorescence microscopy, shows that the TAT PTD derived from human immunodeficiency virus type 1 is rapidly taken up by cells but fails to reach their cytosol, except when dendritic cells, which are known to take up circulating antigens for cross-presentation, are used. In addition to its usefulness in assessing cytosolic uptake, DUB processing of PTD-linked proteins can ensure the intracellular release of cargo proteins, which might prove helpful for MHC-I-based vaccination or intracellular delivery of biologically active polypeptides.
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PMID:A ubiquitin-based assay for the cytosolic uptake of protein transduction domains. 1566 32


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