Nucleolin stabilizes G-quadruplex structures folded by the LTR promoter and silences HIV-1 viral transcription
Author(s) -
Elena Tosoni,
Ilaria Frasson,
Matteo Scalabrin,
Rosalba Perrone,
Elena Butovskaya,
Matteo Nadai,
Giorgio Palù,
Daniele Fabris,
Sara N. Richter
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkv897
Subject(s) - nucleolin , biology , g quadruplex , transcription (linguistics) , aptamer , rna , microbiology and biotechnology , promoter , gene silencing , dna , binding site , genetics , gene , gene expression , nucleolus , cytoplasm , linguistics , philosophy
Folding of the LTR promoter into dynamic G-quadruplex conformations has been shown to suppress its transcriptional activity in HIV-1. Here we sought to identify the proteins that control the folding of this region of proviral genome by inducing/stabilizing G-quadruplex structures. The implementation of electrophorethic mobility shift assay and pull-down experiments coupled with mass spectrometric analysis revealed that the cellular protein nucleolin is able to specifically recognize G-quadruplex structures present in the LTR promoter. Nucleolin recognized with high affinity and specificity the majority, but not all the possible G-quadruplexes folded by this sequence. In addition, it displayed greater binding preference towards DNA than RNA G-quadruplexes, thus indicating two levels of selectivity based on the sequence and nature of the target. The interaction translated into stabilization of the LTR G-quadruplexes and increased promoter silencing activity; in contrast, disruption of nucleolin binding in cells by both siRNAs and a nucleolin binding aptamer greatly increased LTR promoter activity. These data indicate that nucleolin possesses a specific and regulated activity toward the HIV-1 LTR promoter, which is mediated by G-quadruplexes. These observations provide new essential insights into viral transcription and a possible low mutagenic target for antiretroviral therapy.
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