Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
71
result(s) for
"Gorelick, Robert J"
Sort by:
Architecture and secondary structure of an entire HIV-1 RNA genome
by
Burch, Christina L.
,
Weeks, Kevin M.
,
Gorelick, Robert J.
in
Biological and medical sciences
,
Computational Biology
,
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
2009
Single-stranded RNA viruses encompass broad classes of infectious agents and cause the common cold, cancer, AIDS and other serious health threats. Viral replication is regulated at many levels, including the use of conserved genomic RNA structures. Most potential regulatory elements in viral RNA genomes are uncharacterized. Here we report the structure of an entire HIV-1 genome at single nucleotide resolution using SHAPE, a high-throughput RNA analysis technology. The genome encodes protein structure at two levels. In addition to the correspondence between RNA and protein primary sequences, a correlation exists between high levels of RNA structure and sequences that encode inter-domain loops in HIV proteins. This correlation suggests that RNA structure modulates ribosome elongation to promote native protein folding. Some simple genome elements previously shown to be important, including the ribosomal
gag-pol
frameshift stem-loop, are components of larger RNA motifs. We also identify organizational principles for unstructured RNA regions, including splice site acceptors and hypervariable regions. These results emphasize that the HIV-1 genome and, potentially, many coding RNAs are punctuated by previously unrecognized regulatory motifs and that extensive RNA structure constitutes an important component of the genetic code.
Inside HIV-1: structure of an entire RNA gnome
The secondary structure of a complete HIV-1 RNA genome has been determined, based on analysis of authentic HIV RNA extracted from infectious virions. Secondary structures within single-stranded viral RNA genomes are known to serve functional and regulatory roles, but until now there has been no comprehensive analysis of total RNA for any virus. SHAPE technology (high-throughput selective 2′-hydroxyl acylation analysed by primer extension) was used to characterize all structures formed by the HIV-1 RNA genome. Numerous highly structured motifs were discovered, and functions can be inferred for many of these motifs. Importantly, the presence of RNA structural elements was found to influence the translation of proteins and to facilitate proper protein folding. These results emphasize that the HIV-1 genome does have a structure, elements of which are critical to viral fitness. Insights from this work could lead to a better understanding of HIV-1 biology and to new antiretroviral interventions.
Single-stranded RNA viruses are responsible for the common cold, cancer, AIDS and other serious health threats. The genomes of these viruses form conserved secondary structures that have functional and regulatory roles, but most potential regulatory elements in viral RNA genomes remain uncharacterized. Here however, the structure of an entire HIV-1 genome at single nucleotide resolution is reported.
Journal Article
Comparison of SIV and HIV-1 Genomic RNA Structures Reveals Impact of Sequence Evolution on Conserved and Non-Conserved Structural Motifs
by
Potter, E. Lake
,
Burch, Christina L.
,
Weeks, Kevin M.
in
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome
,
AIDS
,
Animals
2013
RNA secondary structure plays a central role in the replication and metabolism of all RNA viruses, including retroviruses like HIV-1. However, structures with known function represent only a fraction of the secondary structure reported for HIV-1(NL4-3). One tool to assess the importance of RNA structures is to examine their conservation over evolutionary time. To this end, we used SHAPE to model the secondary structure of a second primate lentiviral genome, SIVmac239, which shares only 50% sequence identity at the nucleotide level with HIV-1NL4-3. Only about half of the paired nucleotides are paired in both genomic RNAs and, across the genome, just 71 base pairs form with the same pairing partner in both genomes. On average the RNA secondary structure is thus evolving at a much faster rate than the sequence. Structure at the Gag-Pro-Pol frameshift site is maintained but in a significantly altered form, while the impact of selection for maintaining a protein binding interaction can be seen in the conservation of pairing partners in the small RRE stems where Rev binds. Structures that are conserved between SIVmac239 and HIV-1(NL4-3) also occur at the 5' polyadenylation sequence, in the plus strand primer sites, PPT and cPPT, and in the stem-loop structure that includes the first splice acceptor site. The two genomes are adenosine-rich and cytidine-poor. The structured regions are enriched in guanosines, while unpaired regions are enriched in adenosines, and functionaly important structures have stronger base pairing than nonconserved structures. We conclude that much of the secondary structure is the result of fortuitous pairing in a metastable state that reforms during sequence evolution. However, secondary structure elements with important function are stabilized by higher guanosine content that allows regions of structure to persist as sequence evolution proceeds, and, within the confines of selective pressure, allows structures to evolve.
Journal Article
Modifications to rhesus macaque TCR constant regions improve TCR cell surface expression
by
Trivett, Matthew T.
,
Lifson, Jeffrey D.
,
Swanstrom, Adrienne E.
in
Amino acid sequence
,
Amino acids
,
Animal models
2025
T cell immunotherapy success is dependent on effective levels of antigen receptor expressed at the surface of engineered cells. Efforts to optimize surface expression in T cell receptor (TCR)-based therapeutic approaches include optimization of cellular engineering methods and coding sequences, and reducing the likelihood of exogenous TCR α and β chains mispairing with the endogenous TCR chains. Approaches to promote correct human TCR chain pairing include constant region mutations to create an additional disulfide bond between the two chains, full murinization of the constant region of the TCR α and β sequences, and a minimal set of murine mutations to the TCR α and β constant regions. Preclinical animal models are valuable tools to optimize engineering designs and methods, and to evaluate the potential for off-target tissue injury. To further develop rhesus macaque models for TCR based cellular immunotherapy, we tested methods for improving cell surface expression of rhesus macaque TCR in rhesus macaque primary cells by generating five alternative TCRαβ constant region constructs in the context of a SIV Gag-specific TCR: 1. human codon optimized rhesus macaque (RH); 2. RH TCR with an additional disulfide linkage; 3. rhesus macaque constant sequences with minimal murine amino acid substitutions; 4. murinized constant sequences; and 5. murinized constant sequences with a portion of the exposed FG loop in the β constant sequence replaced with rhesus macaque sequence to reduce potential immunogencity. Murinization or mutation of a minimal set of amino acids to the corresponding murine sequence of the constant region resulted in the greatest increase in rhesus macaque TCR surface expression relative to wild type. All novel TCR constructs retained the ability to induce production of cytokines in response to cognate peptide antigen specific stimulation. This work can inform the design of TCRs selected for use in rhesus macaque models of TCR-based cellular immunotherapy.
Journal Article
Minimal Contribution of APOBEC3-Induced G-to-A Hypermutation to HIV-1 Recombination and Genetic Variation
by
Nikolaitchik, Olga A.
,
Gorelick, Robert J.
,
Keele, Brandon F.
in
APOBEC Deaminases
,
Biology and Life Sciences
,
Biomedical research
2016
Although the predominant effect of host restriction APOBEC3 proteins on HIV-1 infection is to block viral replication, they might inadvertently increase retroviral genetic variation by inducing G-to-A hypermutation. Numerous studies have disagreed on the contribution of hypermutation to viral genetic diversity and evolution. Confounding factors contributing to the debate include the extent of lethal (stop codon) and sublethal hypermutation induced by different APOBEC3 proteins, the inability to distinguish between G-to-A mutations induced by APOBEC3 proteins and error-prone viral replication, the potential impact of hypermutation on the frequency of retroviral recombination, and the extent to which viral recombination occurs in vivo, which can reassort mutations in hypermutated genomes. Here, we determined the effects of hypermutation on the HIV-1 recombination rate and its contribution to genetic variation through recombination to generate progeny genomes containing portions of hypermutated genomes without lethal mutations. We found that hypermutation did not significantly affect the rate of recombination, and recombination between hypermutated and wild-type genomes only increased the viral mutation rate by 3.9 × 10-5 mutations/bp/replication cycle in heterozygous virions, which is similar to the HIV-1 mutation rate. Since copackaging of hypermutated and wild-type genomes occurs very rarely in vivo, recombination between hypermutated and wild-type genomes does not significantly contribute to the genetic variation of replicating HIV-1. We also analyzed previously reported hypermutated sequences from infected patients and determined that the frequency of sublethal mutagenesis for A3G and A3F is negligible (4 × 10-21 and1 × 10-11, respectively) and its contribution to viral mutations is far below mutations generated during error-prone reverse transcription. Taken together, we conclude that the contribution of APOBEC3-induced hypermutation to HIV-1 genetic variation is substantially lower than that from mutations during error-prone replication.
Journal Article
High-Throughput SHAPE Analysis Reveals Structures in HIV-1 Genomic RNA Strongly Conserved across Distinct Biological States
by
Rein, Alan
,
Vasa, Suzy M
,
Guex, Nicolas
in
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome
,
Acylation
,
AIDS
2008
Replication and pathogenesis of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is tightly linked to the structure of its RNA genome, but genome structure in infectious virions is poorly understood. We invent high-throughput SHAPE (selective 2'-hydroxyl acylation analyzed by primer extension) technology, which uses many of the same tools as DNA sequencing, to quantify RNA backbone flexibility at single-nucleotide resolution and from which robust structural information can be immediately derived. We analyze the structure of HIV-1 genomic RNA in four biologically instructive states, including the authentic viral genome inside native particles. Remarkably, given the large number of plausible local structures, the first 10% of the HIV-1 genome exists in a single, predominant conformation in all four states. We also discover that noncoding regions functioning in a regulatory role have significantly lower (p-value < 0.0001) SHAPE reactivities, and hence more structure, than do viral coding regions that function as the template for protein synthesis. By directly monitoring protein binding inside virions, we identify the RNA recognition motif for the viral nucleocapsid protein. Seven structurally homologous binding sites occur in a well-defined domain in the genome, consistent with a role in directing specific packaging of genomic RNA into nascent virions. In addition, we identify two distinct motifs that are targets for the duplex destabilizing activity of this same protein. The nucleocapsid protein destabilizes local HIV-1 RNA structure in ways likely to facilitate initial movement both of the retroviral reverse transcriptase from its tRNA primer and of the ribosome in coding regions. Each of the three nucleocapsid interaction motifs falls in a specific genome domain, indicating that local protein interactions can be organized by the long-range architecture of an RNA. High-throughput SHAPE reveals a comprehensive view of HIV-1 RNA genome structure, and further application of this technology will make possible newly informative analysis of any RNA in a cellular transcriptome.
Journal Article
Cationic Residues of the HIV-1 Nucleocapsid Protein Enable DNA Condensation to Maintain Viral Core Particle Stability during Reverse Transcription
by
McCauley, Micah J.
,
Morse, Michael
,
Williams, Mark C.
in
Amino acids
,
Atomic force microscopy
,
capsid
2024
The HIV-1 nucleocapsid protein (NC) is a multifunctional viral protein necessary for HIV-1 replication. Recent studies have demonstrated that reverse transcription (RT) completes in the intact viral capsid, and the timing of RT and uncoating are correlated. How the small viral core stably contains the ~10 kbp double stranded (ds) DNA product of RT, and the role of NC in this process, are not well understood. We showed previously that NC binds and saturates dsDNA in a non-specific electrostatic binding mode that triggers uniform DNA self-attraction, condensing dsDNA into a tight globule against extending forces up to 10 pN. In this study, we use optical tweezers and atomic force microscopy to characterize the role of NC’s basic residues in dsDNA condensation. Basic residue mutations of NC lead to defective interaction with the dsDNA substrate, with the constant force plateau condensation observed with wild-type (WT) NC missing or diminished. These results suggest that NC’s high positive charge is essential to its dsDNA condensing activity, and electrostatic interactions involving NC’s basic residues are responsible in large part for the conformation, size, and stability of the dsDNA-protein complex inside the viral core. We observe DNA re-solubilization and charge reversal in the presence of excess NC, consistent with the electrostatic nature of NC-induced DNA condensation. Previous studies of HIV-1 replication in the presence of the same cationic residue mutations in NC showed significant defects in both single- and multiple-round viral infectivity. Although NC participates in many stages of viral replication, our results are consistent with the hypothesis that cationic residue mutations inhibit genomic DNA condensation, resulting in increased premature capsid uncoating and contributing to viral replication defects.
Journal Article
Genomic HIV RNA Induces Innate Immune Responses through RIG-I-Dependent Sensing of Secondary-Structured RNA
by
Ostergaard, Lars
,
Berg, Randi K.
,
Gorelick, Robert J.
in
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome
,
Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing - metabolism
,
AIDS
2012
Innate immune responses have recently been appreciated to play an important role in the pathogenesis of HIV infection. Whereas inadequate innate immune sensing of HIV during acute infection may contribute to failure to control and eradicate infection, persistent inflammatory responses later during infection contribute in driving chronic immune activation and development of immunodeficiency. However, knowledge on specific HIV PAMPs and cellular PRRs responsible for inducing innate immune responses remains sparse.
Here we demonstrate a major role for RIG-I and the adaptor protein MAVS in induction of innate immune responses to HIV genomic RNA. We found that secondary structured HIV-derived RNAs induced a response similar to genomic RNA. In primary human peripheral blood mononuclear cells and primary human macrophages, HIV RNA induced expression of IFN-stimulated genes, whereas only low levels of type I IFN and tumor necrosis factor α were produced. Furthermore, secondary structured HIV-derived RNA activated pathways to NF-κB, MAP kinases, and IRF3 and co-localized with peroxisomes, suggesting a role for this organelle in RIG-I-mediated innate immune sensing of HIV RNA.
These results establish RIG-I as an innate immune sensor of cytosolic HIV genomic RNA with secondary structure, thereby expanding current knowledge on HIV molecules capable of stimulating the innate immune system.
Journal Article
Structure-Based Alignment and Consensus Secondary Structures for Three HIV-Related RNA Genomes
by
Gorelick, Robert J.
,
Lavender, Christopher A.
,
Weeks, Kevin M.
in
Animals
,
Base Sequence
,
Biomedical research
2015
HIV and related primate lentiviruses possess single-stranded RNA genomes. Multiple regions of these genomes participate in critical steps in the viral replication cycle, and the functions of many RNA elements are dependent on the formation of defined structures. The structures of these elements are still not fully understood, and additional functional elements likely exist that have not been identified. In this work, we compared three full-length HIV-related viral genomes: HIV-1NL4-3, SIVcpz, and SIVmac (the latter two strains are progenitors for all HIV-1 and HIV-2 strains, respectively). Model-free RNA structure comparisons were performed using whole-genome structure information experimentally derived from nucleotide-resolution SHAPE reactivities. Consensus secondary structures were constructed for strongly correlated regions by taking into account both SHAPE probing structural data and nucleotide covariation information from structure-based alignments. In these consensus models, all known functional RNA elements were recapitulated with high accuracy. In addition, we identified multiple previously unannotated structural elements in the HIV-1 genome likely to function in translation, splicing and other replication cycle processes; these are compelling targets for future functional analyses. The structure-informed alignment strategy developed here will be broadly useful for efficient RNA motif discovery.
Journal Article
Targeted binding of nucleocapsid protein transforms the folding landscape of HIV-1 TAR RNA
by
McCauley, Micah J.
,
Musier-Forsyth, Karin
,
Williams, Mark C.
in
Algorithms
,
Base Sequence
,
Binding sites
2015
Retroviral nucleocapsid (NC) proteins are nucleic acid chaperones that play a key role in the viral life cycle. During reverse transcription, HIV-1 NC facilitates the rearrangement of nucleic acid secondary structure, allowing the transactivation response (TAR) RNA hairpin to be transiently destabilized and annealed to a cDNA hairpin. It is not clear how NC specifically destabilizes TAR RNA but does not strongly destabilize the resulting annealed RNA–DNA hybrid structure, which must be formed for reverse transcription to continue. By combining single-molecule optical tweezers measurements with a quantitative mfold-based model, we characterize the equilibrium TAR stability and unfolding barrier for TAR RNA. Experiments show that adding NC lowers the transition state barrier height while also dramatically shifting the barrier location. Incorporating TAR destabilization by NC into the mfold-based model reveals that a subset of preferential protein binding sites is responsible for the observed changes in the unfolding landscape, including the unusual shift in the transition state. We measure the destabilization induced at these NC binding sites and find that NC preferentially targets TAR RNA by binding to specific sequence contexts that are not present on the final annealed RNA–DNA hybrid structure. Thus, specific binding alters the entire RNA unfolding landscape, resulting in the dramatic destabilization of this specific structure that is required for reverse transcription.
Journal Article
HIV-1 Nucleocapsid Protein Binds Double-Stranded DNA in Multiple Modes to Regulate Compaction and Capsid Uncoating
by
Morse, Michael
,
Musier-Forsyth, Karin
,
Gorelick, Robert J.
in
Atomic force microscopy
,
capsid
,
capsid uncoating
2022
The HIV-1 nucleocapsid protein (NC) is a multi-functional protein necessary for viral replication. Recent studies have demonstrated reverse transcription occurs inside the fully intact viral capsid and that the timing of reverse transcription and uncoating are correlated. How a nearly 10 kbp viral DNA genome is stably contained within a narrow capsid with diameter similar to the persistence length of double-stranded (ds) DNA, and the role of NC in this process, are not well understood. In this study, we use optical tweezers, fluorescence imaging, and atomic force microscopy to observe NC binding a single long DNA substrate in multiple modes. We find that NC binds and saturates the DNA substrate in a non-specific binding mode that triggers uniform DNA self-attraction, condensing the DNA into a tight globule at a constant force up to 10 pN. When NC is removed from solution, the globule dissipates over time, but specifically-bound NC maintains long-range DNA looping that is less compact but highly stable. Both binding modes are additionally observed using AFM imaging. These results suggest multiple binding modes of NC compact DNA into a conformation compatible with reverse transcription, regulating the genomic pressure on the capsid and preventing premature uncoating.
Journal Article