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Cyclophilin A Prevents HIV-1 Restriction in Lymphocytes by Blocking Human TRIM5α Binding to the Viral Core
Author(s) -
Anastasia Selyutina,
Mirjana Persaud,
Lacy M. Simons,
Ángel BulnesRamos,
Cindy Buffone,
Alicia MartínezLópez,
Viviana Scoca,
Francesca Di Nunzio,
Joseph Hiatt,
Alexander Marson,
Nevan J. Krogan,
Judd F. Hultquist,
Felipe DiazGriffero
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.264
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 2639-1856
pISSN - 2211-1247
DOI - 10.1016/j.celrep.2020.02.100
Subject(s) - cypa , cyclophilin a , jurkat cells , capsid , biology , peripheral blood mononuclear cell , microbiology and biotechnology , viral replication , virology , t cell , virus , in vitro , immunology , genetics , immune system
Disruption of cyclophilin A (CypA)-capsid interactions affects HIV-1 replication in human lymphocytes. To understand this mechanism, we utilize human Jurkat cells, peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), and CD4 + T cells. Our results show that inhibition of HIV-1 infection caused by disrupting CypA-capsid interactions is dependent on human tripartite motif 5α (TRIM5α hu ), showing that TRIM5α hu restricts HIV-1 in CD4 + T cells. Accordingly, depletion of TRIM5α hu in CD4 + T cells rescues HIV-1 that fail to interact with CypA, such as HIV-1-P90A. We found that TRIM5α hu binds to the HIV-1 core. Disruption of CypA-capsid interactions fail to affect HIV-1-A92E/G94D infection, correlating with the loss of TRIM5α hu binding to HIV-1-A92E/G94D cores. Disruption of CypA-capsid interactions in primary cells has a greater inhibitory effect on HIV-1 when compared to Jurkat cells. Consistent with TRIM5α restriction, disruption of CypA-capsid interactions in CD4 + T cells inhibits reverse transcription. Overall, our results reveal that CypA binding to the core protects HIV-1 from TRIM5α hu restriction.

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