» Articles » PMID: 1328665

Concerted Integration of Viral DNA Termini by Purified Avian Myeloblastosis Virus Integrase

Overview
Journal J Virol
Date 1992 Nov 1
PMID 1328665
Citations 37
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Concerted integration of retroviral DNA termini, which produces a characteristic duplication of sequences at the integration site and formation of the proviral state, is a necessary step of the retroviral life cycle. We investigated the pairwise integration reaction catalyzed by purified avian retrovirus integrase by measuring the response to solution parameters and how the sequences of the viral termini, which comprise the avian imperfect inverted repeat, affect the reaction. When we optimized the reaction, an efficiency was achieved which approached that measured in systems using cytoplasmic extracts from virus-infected cells. The response of purified avian integrase to solution parameters was similar to that of the integration activity derived from cellular extracts. For strand transfer, the U3 viral terminal sequences were preferred to those of the U5 termini, a result we previously showed for the trimming reaction. That the sequence preference was the same for trimming and strand transfer may be further evidence that only one catalytic site is used for both reactions. A significant number of integration sites were sequenced. Interesting trends were found for the fidelity of the host duplications to the avian 6-bp duplication size, the clustering of the integration sites in the nonessential region of the lambda host DNA, and the sequence characteristics of the duplication sites.

Citing Articles

Unraveling the palindromic and nonpalindromic motifs of retroviral integration site sequences by statistical mixture models.

Miklik D, Grim J, Elleder D, Hejnar J Genome Res. 2023; 33(8):1395-1408.

PMID: 37463751 PMC: 10547254. DOI: 10.1101/gr.277694.123.


Identification of amino acids in HIV-1 and avian sarcoma virus integrase subsites required for specific recognition of the long terminal repeat Ends.

Chen A, Weber I, Harrison R, Leis J J Biol Chem. 2005; 281(7):4173-82.

PMID: 16298997 PMC: 2656937. DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M510628200.


Processing of viral DNA ends channels the HIV-1 integration reaction to concerted integration.

Li M, Craigie R J Biol Chem. 2005; 280(32):29334-9.

PMID: 15958388 PMC: 8742673. DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M505367200.


Integrase-specific enhancement and suppression of retroviral DNA integration by compacted chromatin structure in vitro.

Taganov K, Cuesta I, Daniel R, Cirillo L, Katz R, Zaret K J Virol. 2004; 78(11):5848-55.

PMID: 15140982 PMC: 415796. DOI: 10.1128/JVI.78.11.5848-5855.2004.


Subcellular localization and integration activities of rous sarcoma virus reverse transcriptase.

Werner S, Hindmarsh P, Napirei M, Vogel-Bachmayr K, Wohrl B J Virol. 2002; 76(12):6205-12.

PMID: 12021354 PMC: 136205. DOI: 10.1128/jvi.76.12.6205-6212.2002.


References
1.
Grandgenett D, Vora A, Schiff R . A 32,000-dalton nucleic acid-binding protein from avian retravirus cores possesses DNA endonuclease activity. Virology. 1978; 89(1):119-32. DOI: 10.1016/0042-6822(78)90046-6. View

2.
Knaus R, Hippenmeyer P, Misra T, Grandgenett D, Muller U, FITCH W . Avian retrovirus pp32 DNA binding protein. Preferential binding to the promoter region of long terminal repeat DNA. Biochemistry. 1984; 23(2):350-9. DOI: 10.1021/bi00297a026. View

3.
Leavitt A, Rose R, Varmus H . Both substrate and target oligonucleotide sequences affect in vitro integration mediated by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 integrase protein produced in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. J Virol. 1992; 66(4):2359-68. PMC: 289031. DOI: 10.1128/JVI.66.4.2359-2368.1992. View

4.
Vink C, Yeheskiely E, van der Marel G, VAN Boom J, Plasterk R . Site-specific hydrolysis and alcoholysis of human immunodeficiency virus DNA termini mediated by the viral integrase protein. Nucleic Acids Res. 1991; 19(24):6691-8. PMC: 329296. DOI: 10.1093/nar/19.24.6691. View

5.
Cobrinik D, Aiyar A, Ge Z, Katzman M, Huang H, Leis J . Overlapping retrovirus U5 sequence elements are required for efficient integration and initiation of reverse transcription. J Virol. 1991; 65(7):3864-72. PMC: 241417. DOI: 10.1128/JVI.65.7.3864-3872.1991. View