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FEZ1 Plays Dual Roles in Early HIV-1 Infection by Independently Regulating Capsid Transport and Host Interferon-Stimulated Gene Expression

Overview
Journal J Virol
Date 2023 May 23
PMID 37219433
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Abstract

Fasciculation and elongation factor zeta 1 (FEZ1), a multifunctional kinesin-1 adaptor, binds human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) capsids and is required for efficient translocation of virus particles to the nucleus to initiate infection. However, we recently found that FEZ1 also acts as a negative regulator of interferon (IFN) production and interferon-stimulated gene (ISG) expression in primary fibroblasts and human immortalized microglial cell line clone 3 (CHME3) microglia, a natural target cell type for HIV-1 infection. This raises the question of whether depleting FEZ1 negatively affects early HIV-1 infection through effects on virus trafficking or IFN induction or both. Here, we address this by comparing the effects of FEZ1 depletion or IFN-β treatment on early stages of HIV-1 infection in different cell systems with various IFN-β responsiveness. In either CHME3 microglia or HEK293A cells, depletion of FEZ1 reduced the accumulation of fused HIV-1 particles around the nucleus and suppressed infection. In contrast, various doses of IFN-β had little to no effect on HIV-1 fusion or the translocation of fused viral particles to the nucleus in either cell type. Moreover, the potency of IFN-β's effects on infection in each cell type reflected the level of induction of MxB, an ISG that blocks subsequent stages of HIV-1 nuclear import. Collectively, our findings demonstrate that loss of FEZ1 function impacts infection through its roles in two independent processes, as a direct regulator of HIV-1 particle transport and as a regulator of ISG expression. As a hub protein, fasciculation and elongation factor zeta 1 (FEZ1) interacts with a range of other proteins involved in various biological processes, acting as an adaptor for the microtubule (MT) motor kinesin-1 to mediate outward transport of intracellular cargoes, including viruses. Indeed, incoming HIV-1 capsids bind to FEZ1 to regulate the balance of inward/outward motor activity to ensure net forward movement toward the nucleus to initiate infection. However, we recently showed that FEZ1 depletion also induces interferon (IFN) production and interferon-stimulated gene (ISG) expression. As such, it remains unknown whether modulating FEZ1 activity affects HIV-1 infection through its ability to regulate ISG expression or whether FEZ1 functions directly, or both. Using distinct cell systems that separate the effects of IFN and FEZ1 depletion, here we demonstrate that the kinesin adaptor FEZ1 regulates HIV-1 translocation to the nucleus independently of its effects on IFN production and ISG expression.

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