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Showing papers on "Integrase published in 1993"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Analysis of viral DNA synthesis and nuclear import of viral nucleoprotein complexes in the presence of a reversible RT inhibitor demonstrated that reverse transcription of viral RNA could be completed entirely in the host cell nucleus.
Abstract: We have examined components of the preintegration complex of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) and have analyzed features which govern the association of these components. HIV-1 nucleoprotein complexes, isolated from nuclear and cytoplasmic extracts of CD4+ cells after acute virus infection, contained viral RNA and DNA in association with viral matrix (MA), integrase (IN), and reverse transcriptase (RT) antigens but not capsid (CA) antigens and possessed integration activity in vitro. Association of IN but not RT or MA antigens with viral DNA was detergent-stable. Analysis of viral DNA synthesis and nuclear import of viral nucleoprotein complexes in the presence of a reversible RT inhibitor demonstrated that reverse transcription of viral RNA could be completed entirely in the host cell nucleus. Our studies demonstrate structural and functional features of the nucleoprotein (preintegration) complex of HIV-1 which are pertinent to the understanding of early events in the lentiviral life cycle.

495 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that Vif plays a role which is novel for a retroviral protein, in allowing the processing and/or the transport of the internalized HIV core.
Abstract: The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) vif gene encodes a 23-kDa protein of unknown function, also produced by most other known lentiviruses. Vif was found to be essential for the spread of HIV-1 in peripheral blood lymphocytes and in primary macrophages, as well as in some but not all established T-cell lines. Vif was required at the stage of viral particle formation, for cell-to-cell as well as for cell-free transmission of HIV-1. Accordingly, vif-defective viruses could be complemented by the expression of vif in the producer but not in the target cell. vif-defective virions contained wild-type amounts of Gag and Env proteins, reverse transcriptase, integrase, genomic RNA, and partial reverse transcripts. Most importantly, they could enter cells normally, and the vif defect could not be rescued through the use of HIV(MLV [murine leukemia virus]) pseudotypes. Instead, vif-mutant viruses were severely impaired in their ability to complete the synthesis of proviral DNA, once internalized in the target cell. These results suggest that Vif plays a role which is novel for a retroviral protein, in allowing the processing and/or the transport of the internalized HIV core.

488 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A minimal set of functional integrase domains are identified that are sufficient for 3′ processing and DNA strand transfer and find that some domains are contributed in trans by separate monomers within the functional complex.
Abstract: HIV-1 integrase protein possesses the 3' processing and DNA strand transfer activities that are required to integrate HIV DNA into a host chromosome. The N-, C-terminal and core domains of integrase are necessary for both activities in vitro. We find that certain pairs of mutant integrase proteins, which are inactive when each protein is assayed alone, can support near wild type levels of activity when both proteins are present together in the reaction mixture. This complementation implies that HIV-1 integrase functions as a multimer and has enabled us to probe the organization of the functional domains within active mixed multimers. We have identified a minimal set of functional integrase domains that are sufficient for 3' processing and DNA strand transfer and find that some domains are contributed in trans by separate monomers within the functional complex.

354 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that the integrase protein can bind Zn2+, and the histidine and cysteine residues of another conserved motif (HX3-7HX23-32CX2C) are required for efficient Zn 2+ binding.
Abstract: The integrase protein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 carries out a set of polynucleotidyl transfer reactions that result in the covalent attachment of the retroviral cDNA to host DNA. We have analyzed the activities of a set of deletion derivatives of the integrase protein. The analysis reveals that a central domain of only 137 amino acids is sufficient in vitro to catalyze a subset of the reactions carried out by the complete protein. This polypeptide contains an amino acid sequence motif, Asp-Xaa39-58-Asp-Xaa35-Glu (DX39-58DX35E, where X and the subscript indicate the intervening amino acids between the invariant acidic residues), that is found in the integrases of retroviruses and retrotransposons and also the transposase proteins of some bacterial transposable elements. We also find that the integrase protein can bind Zn2+, and the histidine and cysteine residues of another conserved motif (HX3-7HX23-32CX2C) are required for efficient Zn2+ binding. The activities displayed by deletion mutants suggest to us possible functions for the various parts of integrase.

349 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In an effort to further extend the number of targets for development of antiretroviral agents, an in vitro integrase assay is used to investigate a variety of chemicals, including topoisomerase inhibitors, antimalarial agents, DNA binders, naphthoquinones, the flavone quercetin, and caffeic acid phenethyl ester as potential human immunodeficiency virus type 1 integrase inhibitors.
Abstract: In an effort to further extend the number of targets for development of antiretroviral agents, we have used an in vitro integrase assay to investigate a variety of chemicals, including topoisomerase inhibitors, antimalarial agents, DNA binders, naphthoquinones, the flavone quercetin, and caffeic acid phenethyl ester as potential human immunodeficiency virus type 1 integrase inhibitors. Our results show that although several topoisomerase inhibitors--including doxorubicin, mitoxantrone, ellipticines, and quercetin--are potent integrase inhibitors, other topoisomerase inhibitors--such as amsacrine, etoposide, teniposide, and camptothecin--are inactive. Other intercalators, such as chloroquine and the bifunctional intercalator ditercalinium, are also active. However, DNA binding does not correlate closely with integrase inhibition. The intercalator 9-aminoacridine and the polyamine DNA minor-groove binders spermine, spermidine, and distamycin have no effect, whereas the non-DNA binders primaquine, 5,8-dihydroxy-1,4-naphthoquinone, and caffeic acid phenethyl ester inhibit the integrase. Caffeic acid phenethyl ester was the only compound that inhibited the integration step to a substantially greater degree than the initial cleavage step of the enzyme. A model of 5,8-dihydroxy-1,4-naphthoquinone interaction with the zinc finger region of the retroviral integrase protein is proposed.

270 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that the DNA-binding region resides between amino acids 200 and 270 of the 288-residues HIV-1 IN protein, and the catalytic domain of the protein was mapped between amino acid 50 and 194.
Abstract: The integrase (IN) protein of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is required for specific cleavage of the viral DNA termini, and subsequent integration of the viral DNA into target DNA. To identify the various domains of the IN protein we generated a series of IN deletion mutants as fusions to maltose-binding protein (MBP). The deletion mutants were tested for their ability to bind DNA, to mediate site-specific cleavage of the viral DNA ends, and to carry out integration and disintegration reactions. We found that the DNA-binding region resides between amino acids 200 and 270 of the 288-residues HIV-1 IN protein. The catalytic domain of the protein was mapped between amino acids 50 and 194. For the specific activities of IN, cleavage of the viral DNA and integration, both the DNA-binding domain and the conserved amino-terminal region of IN are required. These regions are dispensable however, for disintegration activity.

249 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that mutants from different classes, but not from the same class, can complement each other, and complementation is most efficient when the N‐ and C‐termini are present on the same molecule.
Abstract: textHIV integrase (IN) cleaves two nucleotides off the 3' end of viral DNA and integrates viral DNA into target DNA. Previously, three functional domains in the HIV IN protein have been identified: (i) the central catalytic domain, (ii) the C-terminal DNA binding domain, and (iii) the N-terminal region, which is also necessary for activity. We have now investigated whether IN proteins mutated in different domains can complement each other. Mutant D116I does not contain an intact active site, but does bind DNA, whereas the C-terminal deletion mutant C delta 73 does not bind DNA, but does have an intact active site. Neither mutant protein mediates site-specific cleavage or integration. However, a mixture of both proteins is active, suggesting that IN functions as an oligomer, and that two subunits can have different functions; one subunit binds the (viral) DNA and another subunit provides the active site. We found three classes of mutants, corresponding to the three domains mentioned above. Mutants from different classes, but not from the same class, can complement each other. However, complementation is most efficient when the N- and C-termini are present on the same molecule.

233 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Apr 1993-Virology
TL;DR: Overproduction of the full-length Gag-Pol polyprotein and increased intracellular protease activity were both detrimental to viral assembly, indicating that budding was inefficient and the structures appeared immature and frequently aberrant.

229 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that not all highly conserved IN residues are essential for IN activities in vitro, zinc coordination by the proposed zinc-finger domain may not be required for the activities assayed, alteration of single residues can yield differential effects on IN activities, and target site selection into naked DNA is not necessarily altered by changes in strand transfer activity.

196 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results indicated that the integration was required for efficient viral gene expression and productive infection of human immunodeficiency virus type 1.
Abstract: A mutant of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 which carries a frameshift insertion in the integrase/endonuclease region of pol gene was constructed in vitro. Upon transfection into cells, although this mutant exhibited a normal phenotype with respect to expression of gag, pol, and env genes and to generation of progeny virions, no replication-competent virus in CD4-positive cells emerged. An assay for the single-step replication of a defective viral genome dependent on trans complementation by rev protein was established and used to monitor the early phase of viral infection process. Viral clones with a mutation in the vif, vpr, or vpu gene displayed no abnormality in the early phase. In contrast, the integrase mutant did not direct a marker gene expression after infection. Together with an observation that the mutant lacked the ability to integrate, these results indicated that the integration was required for efficient viral gene expression and productive infection of human immunodeficiency virus type 1.

190 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results support a model involving separate viral and target DNA-binding sites on integrase, and the preferential impairment of processing and integration rather than disintegration by mutations in the HHCC region is consistent with a role for this domain in recognizing features of the viral DNA.
Abstract: Replication of a retroviral genome depends upon integration of the viral DNA into a chromosome of the host cell. The integration reaction is mediated by integrase, a viral enzyme. Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 integrase was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified to near homogeneity. Optimum conditions for the integration and 3'-end-processing activities of integrase were characterized by using an in vitro assay with short, double-stranded oligonucleotide substrates. Mutants containing amino acid substitutions within the HHCC region, defined by phylogenetically conserved pairs of histidine and cysteine residues near the N terminus, were constructed and characterized by using three assays: 3'-end processing, integration, and the reverse of the integration reaction (or disintegration). Mutations in the conserved histidine and cysteine residues abolished both integration and processing activities. Weak activity in both assays was retained by two other mutants containing substitutions for less highly conserved amino acids in this region. All mutants retained activity in the disintegration assay, implying that the active site for DNA cleavage-ligation is not located in this domain and that the HHCC region is not the sole DNA-binding domain in the protein. However, the preferential impairment of processing and integration rather than disintegration by mutations in the HHCC region is consistent with a role for this domain in recognizing features of the viral DNA. This hypothesis is supported by the results of disintegration assays performed with altered substrates. The results support a model involving separate viral and target DNA-binding sites on integrase.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Comparison with all the proka‐ryotic transposable elements sequenced so far revealed that the IS231 transposases share two conserved regions with those of 35 other insertion sequences of wide origins.
Abstract: The eight IS231 variants characterized so far (IS231 A-F, V and W) display similar transposases with an overall 40% identity. Comparison with all the prokaryotic transposable elements sequenced so far revealed that the IS231 transposases share two conserved regions with those of 35 other insertion sequences of wide origins. These insertion sequences, defining the IS4 family, have a common bipartite organization of their ends and are divided into two similarity groups. Interestingly, the transposase domains conserved within this family display similarities with the well known integrase domain shared by transposases of the IS3 and IS15 families, and integrases of retroelements. This domain is also found in IS30-related elements and Tn7 TnsB protein. Amino acid residues conserved throughout all these prokaryotic and eukaryotic mobile genetic elements define a major transposase/integrase motif, likely to play an important role in the transposition process.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: All the HIV pol gene products, the matrix protein p17, and cellular histones are present in cytoplasmic replication complexes that are taking part in or have completed reverse transcription.
Abstract: In this study, we have characterized the HIV DNA-containing replication complexes present in cells early after cell-to-cell infection, using sucrose gradient sedimentation and immunoprecipitation. Six hours after cell-to-cell infection, a cytoplasmic HIV replication complex sedimented as a large structure (320S). This replication complex was precipitated by antisera to three virus-coded enzymes (reverse transcriptase, integrase, protease), to the matrix protein (p17), and to cellular histones but not to the major capsid protein (p24). This replication complex was not associated with cell membranes and could not be dissociated into smaller discrete subunits, using detergents. Nuclear extracts from the same cell-to-cell infection contained a smaller (80S) complex that lacked reverse transcriptase and matrix protein (p17). Cytoplasmic replication complexes from a cell-free virus infection sedimented as 160S structures under identical conditions, as previously reported. Our results indicate that, following cell-to-cell transmission of HIV, all the HIV pol gene products, the matrix protein p17, and cellular histones are present in cytoplasmic replication complexes that are taking part in or have completed reverse transcription. Transportation of the cytoplasmic replication complex to the nucleus is associated with structural changes, including a reduction in size and altered protein composition.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This work focuses on the only protein known to be required for retroviral integration, the integrase (IN) protein, and shows that drugs that specifically inhibit integration may not be toxic for the cell.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The invariant 44 by “common attachment core” present in all att sites contained sufficient information to allow recombination, whilst the flanking sequences effected the efficiency and clearly distinguish the SSV1 — encoded site — specific recombination system from others and make it suitable for the study of regulatory mechanisms of SSV 1 genome — host chromosome interaction and investigations of the evolution of the recombination machinery.
Abstract: We present evidence for the existence of a conservative site-specific recombination system in Archaea by demonstrating integrative recombination of Sulfolobus shibatae virus SSV1 DNA with the host chromosome, catalysed by the SSV1-encoded integrase in vitro. The putative int gene of SSV1 was expressed in Escherichia coli yielding a protein of about 39 kDa. This protein alone efficiently recombined linear DNA substrates containing chromosomal (attA) and viral (attP) attachment sites; recombination with either negatively or positively supercoiled SSV1 DNA was less efficient. Intermolecular attA x attA and attP x attP recombination was also promoted by the SSV integrase. The invariant 44 bp "common attachment core" present in all att sites contained sufficient information to allow recombination, whilst the flanking sequences effected the efficiency. These features clearly distinguish the SSV1--encoded site--specific recombination system from others and make it suitable for the study of regulatory mechanisms of SSV1 genome--host chromosome interaction and investigations of the evolution of the recombination machinery.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The genetic elements required for the integration of the temperate lactococcal bacteriophage phi LC3 into the chromosome of its bacterial host, Lactococcus lactis subsp.
Abstract: The genetic elements required for the integration of the temperate lactococcal bacteriophage phi LC3 into the chromosome of its bacterial host, Lactococcus lactis subsp. cremoris, were identified and characterized. The phi LC3 phage attachment site, attP, was mapped and sequenced. DNA sequence analysis of attP and of the bacterial attachment site, attB, as well as the two phage-host junctions, attR and attL, in the chromosome of a phi LC3 lysogen, identified a 9-bp common core region, 5'-TTCTTCATG'-3, within which the strand exchange reaction takes place during integration. The attB core sequence is located within the C-terminal part of an open reading frame of unknown function. The phi LC3 integrase gene (int), encoding the phi LC3 site-specific recombinase, was identified and is located adjacent to attP. The phi LC3 Int protein, as deduced from the nucleotide sequence, is a basic protein of 374 amino acids that shares significant sequence similarity with other site-specific recombinases of the integrase family. Phage phi LC3 int- and int-attP-defective mutants, conferring an abortive lysogenic phenotype, were constructed.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The mode of action of 3-nitrosobenzamide is identified as interrupting the role of p7NC in accurate proviral DNA synthesis during the infectious phase of the virus life cycle.
Abstract: The C-nitroso compound 3-nitrosobenzamide, which has been shown to remove zinc from the retroviral-type zinc finger of p7NC nucleocapsid proteins, inhibits acute infection of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 in cultured human lymphocytes. The attachment of the virus to lymphocytes and the activities of critical viral enzymes, such as reverse transcriptase, protease, and integrase, are not affected by 3-nitrosobenzamide. However, the process of reverse transcription to form proviral DNA is effectively abolished by the drug, identifying the mode of action of 3-nitrosobenzamide as interrupting the role of p7NC in accurate proviral DNA synthesis during the infectious phase of the virus life cycle.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The integrase encoded by the integron of the transposon Tn21 can mediate the site‐specific fusion of two plasmids if there is a recombination hot spot (59 bp element) in one of them and the sequence GWTMW in the other.
Abstract: Summary The integrase encoded by the integron of the transposon Tn21 can mediate the site-specific fusion of two plasmids if there is a recombination hot spot (59 bp element) in one of them and the sequence GWTMW in the other. The use of this latter, loosely defined site explains how antibiotic-resistance genes could first become associated with integrons.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Although HIV- 1-specific 2-LTR circles from nuclei of HIV-1-infected cells were found to be associated within a high-molecular-weight nucleoprotein complex, antibodies to HIV-2 integrase failed to precipitate this form of viral DNA, indicating that circular forms of HIV -1 DNA are not associated with integrase.
Abstract: The preintegration complex of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) is a large nucleoprotein complex containing viral nucleic acids in association with products of the viral gag and pol genes. One of these proteins, integrase, is absolutely required for the integration and formation of the provirus. Although HIV-1-specific 2-LTR circles from nuclei of HIV-1-infected cells were found to be associated within a high-molecular-weight nucleoprotein complex, antibodies to HIV-1 integrase failed to precipitate this form of viral DNA. This result indicates that circular forms of HIV-1 DNA are not associated with integrase. These viral DNA forms seem to exist in a context of a nucleoprotein complex that is different from a preintegration complex of HIV-1.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that L5 integrase-mediated recombination is greatly stimulated by extracts of M. smegmatis but not by Escherichia coli extracts, purified E. coli integration host factor, or purified HU, indicating the presence of a novel mycobacterial integrationhost factor.
Abstract: Mycobacteriophage L5, a temperate phage of the mycobacteria, forms stable lysogens in Mycobacterium smegmatis via site-specific integration of the phage genome. Recombination occurs within specific phage and bacterial attachment sites and is catalyzed by the phage-encoded integrase protein in vivo. We describe here the overexpression and purification of L5 integrase and its ability to mediate integrative recombination in vitro. We find that L5 integrase-mediated recombination is greatly stimulated by extracts of M. smegmatis but not by Escherichia coli extracts, purified E. coli integration host factor, or purified HU, indicating the presence of a novel mycobacterial integration host factor.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that the central region of the protein is necessary for multimerization and that the N-terminal zinc finger region is not important.
Abstract: The retroviral integrase protein (IN) is responsible for catalyzing a concerted integration reaction in which the two termini of linear viral DNA are joined to host DNA. To probe the potential for IN to form protein multimers, we used the yeast two-hybrid system. The coexpression of a GAL4 DNA binding domain-IN fusion and a GAL4 activation domain-IN fusion together resulted in the successful activation of a GAL4-responsive LacZ reporter gene. The system was used to examine a variety of IN deletion mutants. The results suggest that the central region of the protein is necessary for multimerization and that the N-terminal zinc finger region is not important.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The forward and reverse reactions for integration were characterized for the Moloney murine leukemia virus integrase (M-MuLV IN) protein, and the integration of a model viral substrate into lambda concatamers by IN correctly produced the flanking 4-base pair duplications characteristic of M- MuLV IN.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that at least two Int monomers are required to form the catalytically‐competent species that performs cleavage at the B site, and it is likely that the active site is formed by two IntMonomers.
Abstract: Site-specific recombination of bacteriophage lambda starts with the formation of higher-order protein--DNA complexes, called 'intasomes', and is followed by a series of steps, including the initial DNA cleavage, top-strand exchange, branch migration and bottom-strand exchange, to produce recombinant products. One of the intasomes formed during excisive recombination (the attL complex) is composed of the phage-encoded integrase (Int), integration host factor (IHF) and one of the recombination substrates, attL DNA. Int is the catalytic recombinase and has two different DNA binding domains. When IHF is present, Int binds to two types of sites in attL DNA, the three arm-type sites (P'123) and the core-type sites (B and C') where the reciprocal strand exchange takes place. The Tyr342 residue of Int serves as a nucleophile during strand cleavage and covalently attaches to the DNA through a phosphotyrosyl bond. In vitro complementation assays have been performed for strand cleavage using attL suicide substrates and mutant proteins containing amino acid substitutions at residues conserved in the integrase family of recombinases. We demonstrate that at least two Int monomers are required to form the catalytically-competent species that performs cleavage at the B site. It is likely that the active site is formed by two Int monomers.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It was found that at stoichiometric suramin to protein ratios, suramin displays a strong inhibitory effect on both the processing and strand transfer reactions, related to the decrease of IN protein binding efficiency to the LTR end DNA fragment.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Among the various drugs tested, the antitumor drug 2N-Methyl, 9-hydroxyellipticinium (NMHE) displays a marked inhibitory effect on the IN-catalyzed U5 insertion, related to the DNA binding properties of the drug rather than to a selective effect onThe IN protein or the DNA-IN protein complex.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The bacterial expression plasmids that contain the integrase domain of the human foamy virus (HFV) reverse transcriptase were constructed and expressed in Escherichia coli and the reverse reaction of DNA strand transfer, the disintegration activity, was shown by efficient cleavage of an intermediate Y-shaped oligodeoxynucleotide.
Abstract: The bacterial expression plasmids, pET3b and pET16b, that contain the integrase domain of the human foamy virus (HFV) reverse transcriptase were constructed and expressed in Escherichia coli. The histidine-tagged HFV IN protein was purified to near homogeneity by single-step Ni2+ chelate affinity chromatography. HFV-specific proteins of 39 and 120 kDa from virus-infected cells reacted with antisera raised against the recombinant IN protein. Purified recombinant HFV IN protein was active as an endonuclease specifically cleaving two nucleotides from a 20-bp oligodeoxynucleotide substrate that mimics the authentic 5' ends of HFV DNA. Substrates with mutations relatively close to the cleavage site were less efficiently cleaved or not cleaved at all compared with the HFV U5 DNA end. The purified recombinant protein was active as integrase with double-stranded oligodeoxynucleotide substrates. The reverse reaction of DNA strand transfer, the disintegration activity, was shown by efficient cleavage of an intermediate Y-shaped oligodeoxynucleotide. In the presence of Mn2+ as the preferred divalent cation, oligodeoxynucleotides were specifically and efficiently cleaved. In contrast, endonucleolytic cleavages in the presence of Mg2+ ions led to a broad range of reaction products with the His-tagged HFV IN protein. After further purification of the HFV IN by cation-exchange chromatography, the unspecific degradation of oligonucleotide substrate in the presence of Mg2+ was not detectable.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Structural analogs of the disintegration substrate suggest that the domains of M-MuLV IN that are required for the forward integration reaction substrate differ from those needed for the reverse disintegration reaction substrate.
Abstract: Retroviral integrases mediate site-specific endonuclease and transesterification reactions in the absence of exogenous energy. The basis for the sequence specificity in these integrase-viral DNA recognition processes is unknown. Structural analogs of the disintegration substrate were made to analyze the disintegration reaction mechanism for the Moloney murine leukemia virus (M-MuLV) integrase (IN). Modifications in the target DNA portion of the disintegration substrate decreased enzymatic activity, while substitution of the highly conserved CA in the viral long terminal repeat portion had no effect on activity. The role of the His-Cys finger region in catalysis was addressed by N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) modification of the cysteine residues of M-MuLV IN as well as by mutations. Both integration activities, 39 processing, and strand transfer, were completely inhibited by NEM modification of M-MuLV IN, while disintegration activity was only partially sensitive. However, structural analogs of the disintegration substrates that were modified in the target DNA and had the conserved CA removed were not active with NEM-treated M-MuLV IN. In addition, mutants made in the His-Cys region of M-MuLV IN were examined and found to also be completely blocked in integration but not disintegration activity. These data suggest that the domains of M-MuLV IN that are required for the forward integration reaction substrate differ from those required for the reverse disintegration reaction substrate. Images

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The human immunodeficiency virus integrase (HIV IN) protein cleaves two nucleotides off the 3' end of viral DNA and subsequently integrates the viral DNA into target DNA, and nucleophile selection is determined by the subunit that supplies the active site.
Abstract: textThe human immunodeficiency virus integrase (HIV IN) protein cleaves two nucleotides off the 3' end of viral DNA and subsequently integrates the viral DNA into target DNA. IN exposes a specific phosphodiester bond near the viral DNA end to nucleophilic attack by water or other nucleophiles, such as glycerol or the 3' hydroxyl group of the viral DNA molecule itself. Wild-type IN has a preference for water as the nucleophile; we here describe a class of IN mutants that preferentially use the 3' hydroxyl group of viral DNA as nucleophile. The amino acids that are altered in this class of mutants map near the putative active-site residues Asp-116 and Glu-152. These results support a model in which multiple amino acid side-chains are involved in presentation of the (soluble) nucleophile. IN is probably active as an oligomeric complex, in which the subunits have non-equivalent roles; we here report that nucleophile selection is determined by the subunit that supplies the active site.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The bimolecular complexes are shown to represent a synaptic intermediate in the reaction in which Int protein promotes the IHF‐independent recombination of two attL sites, and should enable a detailed analysis of synapsis for this pathway.
Abstract: Bacteriophage lambda uses site-specific recombination to move its DNA into and out of the Escherichia coli genome. The recombination event is mediated by the recombinase integrase (Int) together with several accessory proteins through short specific DNA sequences known as attachment sites. A gel mobility shift assay has been used to show that, in the absence of accessory proteins, Int can align and hold together two DNA molecules, each with an attachment site, to form stable non-covalent 'bimolecular complexes'. Each attachment site must have both core and arm binding sites for Int to participate in a bimolecular complex. These stable structures can be formed between pairs of attL and attP attachment sites, but cannot include attB or attR sites; they are inhibited by integration host factor (IHF) protein. The bimolecular complexes are shown to represent a synaptic intermediate in the reaction in which Int protein promotes the IHF-independent recombination of two attL sites. These complexes should enable a detailed analysis of synapsis for this pathway.

Journal ArticleDOI
22 Dec 1993-Gene
TL;DR: The protein produced from this highly expressed gene has the expected N-terminal sequence and molecular mass, and displays the DNA processing, DNA joining and disintegration activities expected from recombinant integrase.