Elsevier

Virology

Volume 351, Issue 2, 1 August 2006, Pages 322-339
Virology

Functional characterization of HIV-1 Nef mutants in the context of viral infection

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.virol.2006.03.044Get rights and content
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Abstract

Nef is an important pathogenesis factor of HIV-1 with a multitude of effector functions. We have designed a broad panel of isogenic viruses encoding defined mutants of HIV-1SF2 Nef and analyzed their biological activity in the context of productive HIV-1 infection. Analysis of subcellular localization, virion incorporation, downregulation of cell surface CD4 and MHC-I, enhancement of virion infectivity and facilitation of HIV replication in primary human T lymphocytes mostly confirmed the mapping of Nef determinants previously reported upon isolated expression of Nef. However, reduced activity in downregulation of CD4, infectivity enhancement and virion incorporation of a Nef variant (Δ12–39) lacking an amphipatic helix required for binding of a cellular kinase complex and the association of Nef with MHC-I/AP-1 suggested a novel role of this N-terminal motif. The SH3 binding motif of Nef was partially required for infectivity enhancement and replication but not for receptor downmodulation. In contrast to previous results obtained using other Nef alleles, non-myristoylated SF2-Nef was only partly defective when expressed during HIV infection and was present in HIV-1 particles. Importantly, incorporation of Nef into HIV-1 virions was not required for any of the tested Nef activities. Altogether, this study provides a broad characterization and mapping of multiple Nef activities in HIV-infected cells. The results emphasize that multiple activities govern Nef's effects on HIV replication and argue against a role of virion incorporation for Nef's activity as pathogenicity factor.

Keywords

HIV Nef
Mutant virus panel
Virion incorporation
Myristoylation
Cell surface receptor modulation
Infectivity
Replication

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