An Inducible ESCRT-III Inhibition Tool to Control HIV-1 Budding.
Haiyan WangBenoît GalletChristine MoriscotMylène PezetChristine ChatellardJean-Philippe KlemanHeinrich GöttlingerWinfried WeissenhornCécile BoscheronPublished in: Viruses (2023)
HIV-1 budding as well as many other cellular processes require the Endosomal Sorting Complex Required for Transport (ESCRT) machinery. Understanding the architecture of the native ESCRT-III complex at HIV-1 budding sites is limited due to spatial resolution and transient ESCRT-III recruitment. Here, we developed a drug-inducible transient HIV-1 budding inhibitory tool to enhance the ESCRT-III lifetime at budding sites. We generated autocleavable CHMP2A, CHMP3, and CHMP4B fusion proteins with the hepatitis C virus NS3 protease. We characterized the CHMP-NS3 fusion proteins in the absence and presence of protease inhibitor Glecaprevir with regard to expression, stability, localization, and HIV-1 Gag VLP budding. Immunoblotting experiments revealed rapid and stable accumulation of CHMP-NS3 fusion proteins. Notably, upon drug administration, CHMP2A-NS3 and CHMP4B-NS3 fusion proteins substantially decrease VLP release while CHMP3-NS3 exerted no effect but synergized with CHMP2A-NS3. Localization studies demonstrated the relocalization of CHMP-NS3 fusion proteins to the plasma membrane, endosomes, and Gag VLP budding sites. Through the combined use of transmission electron microscopy and video-microscopy, we unveiled drug-dependent accumulation of CHMP2A-NS3 and CHMP4B-NS3, causing a delay in HIV-1 Gag-VLP release. Our findings provide novel insight into the functional consequences of inhibiting ESCRT-III during HIV-1 budding and establish new tools to decipher the role of ESCRT-III at HIV-1 budding sites and other ESCRT-catalyzed cellular processes.
Keyphrases
- hepatitis c virus
- antiretroviral therapy
- hiv positive
- human immunodeficiency virus
- hiv infected
- hiv testing
- dengue virus
- hiv aids
- men who have sex with men
- south africa
- long non coding rna
- quantum dots
- electron microscopy
- high throughput
- aedes aegypti
- drug administration
- blood brain barrier
- binding protein
- optical coherence tomography
- loop mediated isothermal amplification