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Short- and long-range interactions in the HIV-1 5' UTR regulate genome dimerization and packaging.

Liqing YeAnne-Sophie Gribling-BurrerPatrick BohnAnuja KibeCharlene BörtleinUddhav B AmbiShazeb AhmadMarco Olguin-NavaMaureen SmithNeva CaliskanMax von KleistRedmond P Smyth
Published in: Nature structural & molecular biology (2022)
RNA dimerization is the noncovalent association of two human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) genomes. It is a conserved step in the HIV-1 life cycle and assumed to be a prerequisite for binding to the viral structural protein Pr55 Gag during genome packaging. Here, we developed functional analysis of RNA structure-sequencing (FARS-seq) to comprehensively identify sequences and structures within the HIV-1 5' untranslated region (UTR) that regulate this critical step. Using FARS-seq, we found nucleotides important for dimerization throughout the HIV-1 5' UTR and identified distinct structural conformations in monomeric and dimeric RNA. In the dimeric RNA, key functional domains, such as stem-loop 1 (SL1), polyadenylation signal (polyA) and primer binding site (PBS), folded into independent structural motifs. In the monomeric RNA, SL1 was reconfigured into long- and short-range base pairings with polyA and PBS, respectively. We show that these interactions disrupt genome packaging, and additionally show that the PBS-SL1 interaction unexpectedly couples the PBS with dimerization and Pr55 Gag binding. Altogether, our data provide insights into late stages of HIV-1 life cycle and a mechanistic explanation for the link between RNA dimerization and packaging.
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