» Articles » PMID: 35438536

The HIV-1 Viral Protease Is Activated During Assembly and Budding Prior to Particle Release

Overview
Journal J Virol
Date 2022 Apr 19
PMID 35438536
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

HIV-1 encodes a viral protease that is essential for the maturation of infectious viral particles. While protease inhibitors are effective antiretroviral agents, recent studies have shown that prematurely activating, rather than inhibiting, protease function leads to the pyroptotic death of infected cells, with exciting implications for efforts to eradicate viral reservoirs. Despite 40 years of research into the kinetics of protease activation, it remains unclear exactly when protease becomes activated. Recent reports have estimated that protease activation occurs minutes to hours after viral release, suggesting that premature protease activation is challenging to induce efficiently. Here, monitoring viral protease activity with sensitive techniques, including nanoscale flow cytometry and instant structured illumination microscopy, we demonstrate that the viral protease is activated within cells prior to the release of free virions. Using genetic mutants that lock protease into a precursor conformation, we further show that both the precursor and mature protease have rapid activation kinetics and that the activity of the precursor protease is sufficient for viral fusion with target cells. Our finding that HIV-1 protease is activated within producer cells prior to release of free virions helps resolve a long-standing question of when protease is activated and suggests that only a modest acceleration of protease activation kinetics is required to induce potent and specific elimination of HIV-infected cells. HIV-1 protease inhibitors have been a mainstay of antiretroviral therapy for more than 2 decades. Although antiretroviral therapy is effective at controlling HIV-1 replication, persistent reservoirs of latently infected cells quickly reestablish replication if therapy is halted. A promising new strategy to eradicate the latent reservoir involves prematurely activating the viral protease, which leads to the pyroptotic killing of infected cells. Here, we use highly sensitive techniques to examine the kinetics of protease activation during and shortly after particle formation. We found that protease is fully activated before virus is released from the cell membrane, which is hours earlier than recent estimates. Our findings help resolve a long-standing debate as to when the viral protease is initially activated during viral assembly and confirm that prematurely activating HIV-1 protease is a viable strategy to eradicate infected cells following latency reversal.

Citing Articles

Flow virometry: recent advancements, best practices, and future frontiers.

Fernandes C, Persaud A, Chaphekhar D, Burnie J, Belanger C, Tang V J Virol. 2025; 99(2):e0171724.

PMID: 39868829 PMC: 11853038. DOI: 10.1128/jvi.01717-24.


Mechanism and Kinetics of HIV-1 Protease Activation.

Tabler C, Tilton J Viruses. 2025; 16(12.

PMID: 39772135 PMC: 11680253. DOI: 10.3390/v16121826.


Premature Activation of the HIV-1 Protease Is Influenced by Polymorphisms in the Hinge Region.

Tabler C, Wegman S, Alhusaini N, Lee N, Tilton J Viruses. 2024; 16(6).

PMID: 38932142 PMC: 11209583. DOI: 10.3390/v16060849.


Evaluating HIV-1 Infectivity and Virion Maturation across Varied Producer Cells with a Novel FRET-Based Detection and Quantification Assay.

McGraw A, Hillmer G, Choi J, Narayan K, Mehedincu S, Marquez D Int J Mol Sci. 2024; 25(12).

PMID: 38928103 PMC: 11204348. DOI: 10.3390/ijms25126396.


Analysis of Individual Viral Particles by Flow Virometry.

Tabler C, Tilton J Viruses. 2024; 16(5).

PMID: 38793683 PMC: 11125929. DOI: 10.3390/v16050802.


References
1.
Salgado G, Marquant R, Vogel A, Alves I, Feller S, Morellet N . Structural studies of HIV-1 Gag p6ct and its interaction with Vpr determined by solution nuclear magnetic resonance. Biochemistry. 2009; 48(11):2355-67. DOI: 10.1021/bi801794v. View

2.
Pettit S, Lindquist J, Kaplan A, Swanstrom R . Processing sites in the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Gag-Pro-Pol precursor are cleaved by the viral protease at different rates. Retrovirology. 2005; 2:66. PMC: 1291402. DOI: 10.1186/1742-4690-2-66. View

3.
Zila V, Margiotta E, Turonova B, Muller T, Zimmerli C, Mattei S . Cone-shaped HIV-1 capsids are transported through intact nuclear pores. Cell. 2021; 184(4):1032-1046.e18. PMC: 7895898. DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2021.01.025. View

4.
Sato K, Yamamoto S, Misawa N, Yoshida T, Miyazawa T, Koyanagi Y . Comparative study on the effect of human BST-2/Tetherin on HIV-1 release in cells of various species. Retrovirology. 2009; 6:53. PMC: 2702332. DOI: 10.1186/1742-4690-6-53. View

5.
Meng J, Lai M, Munshi V, Grobler J, McCauley J, Zuck P . Screening of HIV-1 Protease Using a Combination of an Ultra-High-Throughput Fluorescent-Based Assay and RapidFire Mass Spectrometry. J Biomol Screen. 2015; 20(5):606-15. DOI: 10.1177/1087057115570838. View