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Investigator(s) |
Flint SJ, Enquist LW, Racaniello VR, Skalka AM, American Society for Microbiology. Principles of virology. Washington, DC: ASM Press; 2009.
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Skalka
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Merkel G, Andrake MD, Ramcharan J, Skalka AM. Oligonucleotide-based assays for integrase activity. Methods. 2009 Apr;47(4):243-8.
Oligonucleotide assays have been invaluable for elucidation of the molecular mechanisms of retroviral integrases. A suite of rapid and sensitive fluorescence assays to measure the DNA binding. processing, and joining activities of integrase (IN) is described here. The assays are especially useful for characterizing the major activities of the enzyme, and for handling large numbers of samples efficiently. They call greatly facilitate further biochemical and Structural analyses for HIV-1 and other IN proteins. The assays can also be adapted for moderate-high throughput testing of various inhibitory compounds. (C) 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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Skalka
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Andrake MD, Sauter MM, Boland K, Goldstein AD, Hussein M, Skalka AM. Nuclear import of Avian Sarcoma Virus integrase is facilitated by host cell factors. Retrovirology. 2008;5:73.
BACKGROUND: Integration of retroviral DNA into the host cell genome is an obligatory step in the virus life cycle. In previous reports we identified a sequence (amino acids 201-236) in the linker region between the catalytic core and C-terminal domains of the avian sarcoma virus (ASV) integrase protein that functions as a transferable nuclear localization signal (NLS) in mammalian cells. The sequence is distinct from all known NLSs but, like many, contains basic residues that are essential for activity. RESULTS: Our present studies with digitonin-permeabilized HeLa cells show that nuclear import mediated by the NLS of ASV integrase is an active, saturable, and ATP-dependent process. As expected for transport through nuclear pore complexes, import is blocked by treatment of cells with wheat germ agglutinin. We also show that import of ASV integrase requires soluble cellular factors but does not depend on binding the classical adapter Importin-alpha. Results from competition studies indicate that ASV integrase relies on one or more of the soluble components that mediate transport of the linker histone H1. CONCLUSION: These results are consistent with a role for ASV integrase and cytoplasmic cellular factors in the nuclear import of its viral DNA substrate, and lay the foundation for identification of host cell components that mediate this reaction.
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Skalka
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Poleshko A, Palagin I, Zhang R, Boimel P, Castagna C, Adams PD, Skalka AM, Katz RA. Identification of cellular proteins that maintain retroviral epigenetic silencing: evidence for an antiviral response. J Virol. 2008 Mar;82(5):2313-23.
Integrated retroviral DNA is subject to epigenetic gene silencing, resulting in loss of expression of viral genes as well as reporter or therapeutic genes transduced by retroviral vectors. Possible mediators of such silencing include the histone deacetylase (HDAC) family of cellular proteins. We previously isolated HeLa cell populations that harbored silent avian sarcoma virus-based green fluorescent protein (GFP) vectors that could be reactivated by treatment with HDAC inhibitors. Here, we developed a small interfering RNA (siRNA)-based approach to identify specific host factors that participate in the maintenance of silencing. Knockdown of HDAC1, the transcriptional repressor Daxx (a binding partner of HDAC1), or heterochromatin protein 1 gamma resulted in robust and specific GFP reporter gene reactivation. Analyses of cell clones and diverse GFP vector constructs revealed that the roles of HDAC1 and Daxx in retroviral silencing are largely independent of the integration site or the promoter controlling the silent GFP reporter gene. Previous findings from our laboratory and those of others have suggested that Daxx and HDAC proteins may act broadly as part of an antiviral response to repress viral gene transcription. Expression of presumptive viral "countermeasure" proteins that are known to inhibit Daxx or HDACs (pp71, IE2, and Gam1) resulted in the reactivation of GFP reporter gene expression. This study has identified individual host factors that maintain retroviral silencing and supports the proposal that these factors participate in an antiviral response. Furthermore, our results indicate that siRNAs can be used as specific reagents to interrupt the maintenance of epigenetic silencing.
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Adams
Skalka
Zhang
Katz
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Poleshko A, Palagin I, Zhang R, Boimel P, Castagna C, Adams PD, Skalka AM, Katz RA. Identification of cellular proteins that maintain retroviral epigenetic silencing: Evidence for an antiviral response. J Virol. 2008 Mar;82(5):2313-23.
Integrated retroviral DNA is subject to epigenetic gene silencing, resulting in loss of expression of viral genes as well as reporter or therapeutic genes transduced by retroviral vectors. Possible mediators of such silencing include the histone deacetylase (HDAC) family of cellular proteins. We previously isolated HeLa cell populations that harbored silent avian sarcoma virus-based green fluorescent protein (GFP) vectors that could be reactivated by treatment with HDAC inhibitors. Here, we developed a small interfering RNA (siRNA)-based. approach to identify specific host factors that participate in the maintenance of silencing. Knockdown of HDAC1, the transcriptional repressor Daxx (a binding partner of HDAC1), or heterochromatin protein 1 gamma resulted in robust and specific GFP reporter gene reactivation. Analyses of cell clones and diverse GFP vector constructs revealed that the roles of HDAC1 and Daxx in retroviral silencing are largely independent of the integrati!
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Adams
Skalka
Zhang
Katz
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Katz RA, Jack-Scott E, Narezkina A, Palagin I, Boimel P, Kulkosky J, Nicolas E, Greger JG, Skalka AM. High Frequency Epigenetic Repression and Silencing of Retroviruses can be Antagonized by HDAC Inhibitors and Transcriptional Activators, but Uniform Reactivation in Cell Clones is Restricted by Additional Mechanisms. J Virol. 2007 Jan 3;81(6):2592-604.
Integrated retroviral DNA is subject to epigenetic gene silencing, but the viral and host cell properties that influence initiation, maintenance, and reactivation are not fully understood. Here we describe rapid and high frequency epigenetic repression and silencing of integrated avian sarcoma virus (ASV)-based vector DNAs in human HeLa cells. Initial studies utilized a vector carrying the strong human cytomegalovirus immediate early (hCMV IE) promoter to drive expression of a green fluorescent protein (GFP) reporter gene, and cells were sorted into two populations based on GFP expression [GFP(+) and GFP(-)]. Two potent epigenetic effects were observed: i) a very broad distribution of GFP intensities among cells in the GFP(+) population as well as individual GFP(+) clones, and ii) high frequency GFP reporter gene silencing in GFP(-) cells. We previously showed that histone deacetylases (HDACs) can associate with ASV DNA soon after infection, and may act to repress viral transcription at the level of chromatin. Consistent with this finding, we report here that treatment with the histone deacetylase inhibitor (HDI) trichostatin A (TSA) induces GFP activation in GFP(-) cells, and can also increase GFP expression in GFP(+) cells. In the case of the GFP(-) populations, we found that after removal of TSA, GFP silencing was reestablished in a subset of cells. We used the latter finding to enrich for stable GFP(-) cell populations in which viral GFP reporter expression could be reactivated by TSA; furthermore, we found that the ability to isolate such populations was independent of the promoter driving the GFP gene. In such enriched cultures, hCMV IE-driven, but not the viral LTR-driven silent GFP reporter expression, could be reactivated by the transcriptional activator prostratin. Microscopy-based studies using synchronized cells revealed variegated reactivation in cell clones, indicating that secondary epigenetic effects can restrict reactivation from silencing. Furthermore we found that entry into S-phase was not required for reactivation. We conclude that HDACs can act rapidly to initiate and maintain promoter-independent retroviral epigenetic repression and silencing, but that reactivation can be restricted by additional mechanisms.
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Skalka
Katz
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Ramcharan J, Colleluori DM, Merkel G, Andrake MD, Skalka AM. Mode of inhibition of HIV-I integrase by a C-terminal domain-specific monoclonal antibody. RETROVIROLOGY. 2006;3:34.
Background: To further our understanding of the structure and function of HIV-1 integrase ( IN) we developed and characterized a library of monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) directed against this protein. One of these antibodies, mAb33, which is specific for the C-terminal domain, was found to inhibit HIV-1 IN processing activity in vitro; a corresponding Fv fragment was able to inhibit HIV-1 integration in vivo. Our subsequent studies, using heteronuclear nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, identified six solvent accessible residues on the surface of the C-terminal domain that were immobilized upon binding of the antibody, which were proposed to comprise the epitope. Here we test this hypothesis by measuring the affinity of mAb33 to HIV-1 proteins that contain Ala substitutions in each of these positions. To gain additional insight into the mode of inhibition we also measured the DNA binding capacity and enzymatic activities of the Ala substituted proteins. Results: We found that Ala substitution of any one of five of the putative epitope residues, F223, R224, Y226, I267, and I268, caused a decrease in the affinity of the mAb33 for HIV-1 IN, confirming the prediction from NMR data. Although IN derivatives with Ala substitutions in or near the mAb33 epitope exhibited decreased enzymatic activity, none of the epitope substitutions compromised DNA binding to full length HIV-1 IN, as measured by surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy. Two of these derivatives, IN (1276A) and IN (1267A/I268A), exhibited both increased DNA binding affinity and uncharacteristic dissociation kinetics; these proteins also exhibited nonspecific nuclease activity. Results from these investigations are discussed in the context of current models for how the C-terminal domain interacts with substrate DNA. Conclusion: It is unlikely that inhibition of HIV-1 IN activity by mAb33 is caused by direct interaction with residues that are essential for substrate binding. Rather our findings are most consistent with a model whereby mAb33 binding distorts or constrains the structure of the C-terminal domain and/or blocks substrate binding indirectly. The DNA binding properties and nonspecific nuclease activity of the 1267A derivatives suggest that the C-terminal domain of IN normally plays an important role in aligning the viral DNA end for proper processing.
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Skalka
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Ramcharan J, Skalka AM. Strategies for identification of HIV-1 integrase inhibitors. Future Virology. 2006 Nov;1(6):717-31.
HIV-1 integrase, which catalyzes the joining of viral DNA to the host cell DNA, has attracted considerable attention as a target for the design and screening of novel anti-HIV drugs as it is essential for virus replication and the establishment of persistent infection. Progress in the identification of different classes of compounds that block integrase activity has been summarized recently in several excellent reviews. Here, we present a brief overview of integrase inhibition, highlighting some of the unusual properties of this protein and important considerations in searching for potential new inhibitors and their evaluation.
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Skalka
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Greger JG, Katz RA, Ishov AM, Maul GG, Skalka AM. The cellular protein Daxx interacts with avian sarcoma virus integrase and viral DNA to repress viral transcription. J Virol. 2005 Apr;79(8):4610-8.
The cellular protein Daxx was identified as an interactor with avian sarcoma virus (ASV) integrase (IN) in a yeast two-hybrid screen. After infection, Daxx-IN interactions were detected by coinummoprecipitation. An association between Daxx and viral DNA, likely mediated by IN, was also detected by chromatin immunoprecipitation. Daxx was not required for early events in ASV replication, including integration, as Daxx-null cells were transduced as efficiently as Daxx-expressing cells. However, viral reporter gene expression from ASV-based vectors was substantially higher in the Daxx-null cells than in Daxx-complemented cells. Consistent with this observation, histone deacetylases (HDACs) were found to associate with viral DNA in Daxx-complemented cells but not in Daxx-null cells. Furthermore, Daxx protein was induced in an interferon-like manner upon ASV infection. We conclude that Daxx interacts with an IN-viral DNA complex early after infection and may mediate the repression of viral gene expression via the recruitment of HDACs. Our findings provide a novel example of cellular immunity against viral replication in which viral transcription is repressed via the recruitment of antiviral proteins to the viral DNA.
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Skalka
Katz
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Ason B, Knauss DJ, Balke AM, Merkel G, Skalka AM, Reznikoff WS. Targeting Tn5 transposase identifies human immunodeficiency virus type 1 inhibitors. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2005 May;49(5):2035-43.
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 (HIV-1) integrase is an underutilized drug target for the treatment of HIV infection. One limiting factor is the lack of costructural data for use in the. rational design or modification of integrase inhibitors. Tn5 transposase is a structurally well characterized, related protein that may serve as a useful surrogate. However, little data exist on inhibitor cross-reactivity. Here we screened 16,000 compounds using Tn5 transposase as the target and identified 20 compounds that appear to specifically inhibit complex assembly. Six were found to also inhibit HIV-1 integrase. These compounds likely interact with a highly conserved region presumably within the catalytic core. Most promising, several cinnamoyl derivatives were found to inhibit HIV transduction in cells. The identification of integrase inhibitors from a screen using Tn5 transposase as the target illustrates the utility of Tn5 as a surrogate for HIV-1 integration even though the relationship between the two systems is limited to the active site architecture and catalytic mechanism.
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Skalka
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Daniel R, Marusich E, Argyris E, Zhao RY, Skalka AM, Pomerantz RJ. Caffeine inhibits human immunodeficiency virus type 1 transduction of nondividing cells. J Virol. 2005 Feb;79(4):2058-65.
Caffeine is an efficient inhibitor of DNA repair and DNA damage-activated checkpoints. We have shown recently that caffeine inhibits retroviral transduction of dividing cells, most likely by blocking postintegration repair. This effect may be mediated at least in part by a cellular target of caffeine, the ataxia telangiectasiamutated and Rad3-related (ATR) kinase. In this study, we present evidence that caffeine also inhibits efficient transduction of nondividing cells. We observed reduced transduction in caffeine-treated growth-arrested cells as well as caffeine-treated terminally differentiated human neurons and macrophages. Furthermore, this deficiency was observed with a human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) vector lacking Vpr, indicating that the effect is independent of the presence of this viral protein in the infecting virion. Finally, we show that HIV-1 transduction of nocodazole-arrested cells is reduced in cells that express an ATR dominant-negative protein (kinase-dead ATR [ATRkd]) and that the residual transduction of ATRkd-expressing cells is relatively resistant to caffeine. Taken together, these data suggest that the effect(s) of caffeine on HIV-1 transduction is mediated at least partly by the inhibition of the ATR pathway but is not dependent on the caffeine-mediated inhibition of cell cycle checkpoints.
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Skalka
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Katz RA, Greger JG, Skalka AM. Effects of cell cycle status on early events in retroviral replication. J Cell Biochem. 2005 Apr 1;94(5):880-9.
The study of retroviruses over the last century has revealed a wide variety of disease-producing mechanisms, as well as apparently harmless interactions with animal hosts. Despite their potential pathogenic properties, the intrinsic features of retroviruses have been harnessed to create gene transfer vectors that maybe useful for the treatment of disease. Retroviruses, as all viruses, have evolved to infect specific cells within the host, and such specificities are relevant to both pathogenesis and retrovirus-based vector design. The majority of cells of an animal host are not progressing rapidly through the cell cycle, and such a cellular environment appears to be suboptimal for replication of all retroviruses. Retrovirus-based vectors can therefore be restricted in many important target cells, such as post-mitotic differentiated cells or stem cells that may divide only infrequently. Despite intense interest, our understanding of how cell cycle status influences retroviral infection is still quite limited. In this review, we focus on the importance of the cell cycle as it relates to the early steps in retroviral replication. Retroviruses have been categorized based on their abilities to complete these early steps in non-cycling cells. However,all retroviruses are subject to a variety of cell cycle restrictions. Here, we discuss such restrictions, and how they may block retroviral replication, be tolerated, or overcome. (c) 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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Skalka
Katz
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Skalka AM, Katz RA. Retroviral DNA integration and the DNA damage response. Cell Death Differ. 2005;12(S1):971-8.
Retroviral DNA integration creates a discontinuity in the host cell chromatin and repair of this damage is required to complete the integration process. As integration and repair are essential for both viral replication and cell survival, it is possible that specific interactions with the host DNA repair systems might provide new cellular targets for human immunodeficiency virus therapy. Various genetic, pharmacol., and biochem. studies have provided strong evidence that postintegration DNA repair depends on components of the nonhomologous end-joining (NHEJ) pathway (DNA-PK (DNA-dependent protein kinase), Ku, Xrcc4, DNA ligase IV) and DNA damage-sensing pathways (Atr (Atm and Rad related), g-H2AX). Furthermore, deficiencies in NHEJ components result in susceptibility to apoptotic cell death following retroviral infection. Here, we review these findings and discuss other ways that retroviral DNA intermediates may interact with the host DNA damage signaling and repair pathways.Cell Death and Differentiation (2005) 12, 971-978. [on SciFinder (R)]
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Skalka
Katz
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Greger JG, Katz RA, Taganov K, Rall GF, Skalka AM. Transduction of terminally differentiated neurons by avian sarcoma virus. J Virol. 2004 May;78(9):4902-6.
Recent studies have demonstrated that avian sarcoma virus (ASV) can transduce cycle-arrested cells. Here, we have assessed quantitatively the transduction efficiency of an ASV vector in naturally arrested mouse hippocampal neurons. This efficiency was determined by comparing the number of transduced cells after infection of differentiated neurons versus dividing progenitor cells. The results indicate that ASV is able to transduce these differentiated neurons efficiently and that this activity is not the result of infection of residual dividing cells. The transduction efficiency of the ASV vector was found to be intermediate between the relatively high and low efficiencies obtained with human immunodeficiency virus type I and murine leukemia virus vectors, respectively.
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Rall
Skalka
Katz
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Daniel R, Greger JG, Katz RA, Taganov KD, Wu X, Kappes JC, Skalka AM. Evidence that stable retroviral transduction and cell survival following DNA integration depend on components of the nonhomologous end joining repair pathway. J Virol. 2004 Aug;78(16):8573-81.
We have previously reported several lines of evidence that support a role for cellular DNA repair systems in completion of the retroviral DNA integration process. Failure to repair an intermediate in the process of integrating viral DNA into host DNA appears to trigger growth arrest or death of a large percentage of infected cells. Cellular proteins involved in the nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ) pathway (DNA-PK(CS)) and the damage-signaling kinases (ATM and ATR) have been implicated in this process. However, some studies have suggested that NHEJ proteins may not be required for the completion of lentiviral DNA integration. Here we provide additional evidence that NHEJ proteins are required for stable transduction by human immunodeficiency type 1 (HIV-1)-based vectors. Our analyses with two different reporters show that the number of stably transduced DNA-PK(CS)-deficient scid fibroblasts was reduced by 80 to 90% compared to the number of control cells. Furthermore, transduction efficiency can be restored to wild-type levels in scid cells that are complemented with a functional DNA-PK(CS) gene. The efficiency of stable transduction by an HIV-1-based vector is also reduced upon infection of Xrcc4 and ligase IV-deficient cells, implying a role for these components of the NHEJ repair pathway. Finally, we show that cells deficient in ligase IV are killed by infection with an integrase-competent but not an integrase-deficient HIV-1 vector. Results presented in this study lend further support to a general role for the NHEJ DNA repair pathway in completion of the retroviral DNA integration process.
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Skalka
Katz
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Daniel R, Myers CB, Kulkosky J, Taganov K, Greger JG, Merkel G, Weber IT, Harrison RW, Skalka AM. Characterization of a naphthalene derivative inhibitor of retroviral integrases. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses. 2004 Feb;20(2):135-44.
The retroviral integrase protein (IN) is essential for virus replication and, therefore, an attractive target for the development of inhibitors to treat human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. Diverse classes of compounds that are active against this protein have been discovered using in vitro assays. Here we describe the synthesis of a novel compound, 3,8-dibromo-7-amino-4-hydroxy-2-naphthalenesulfonic acid (2BrNSA), which inhibits the in vitro activities of the full-length HIV-1 and avian sarcoma virus (ASV) integrases, and the isolated catalytic core fragment of the ASV protein (residues 52-207). The compound also inhibits retroviral reverse transcriptase in vitro, but the IC50 for the HIV-1 enzyme is almost two orders of magnitude higher than for HIV-1 integrase. The inhibitor was found to be active in cell culture, preventing reporter gene transduction of HeLa cells by both ASV and HIV-1 vectors. Neither viral attachment nor uptake into cells appeared to be affect! ed in these transfections, whereas accumulation of vector DNA and its joining to host DNA were both drastically reduced in the presence of the inhibitor. Propagation of two different strains of replication-competent HIV-1 in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) was also reduced by the inhibitor, allowing survival of a substantial number of cells in the treated cultures. Based on these and other results we speculate that binding of 2BrNSA to integrase in infected cells interferes not only with its catalytic activity but also with critical interactions that are required for the formation or function of the reverse transcriptase complex. Its activity in cell culture suggests that this inhibitor may provide a valuable new lead for further development of drugs that target early steps in the HIV life cycle.
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Skalka
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Skalka
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Daniel R, Ramcharan J, Rogakou E, Taganov KD, Greger JG, Bonner W, Nussenzweig A, Katz RA, Skalka AM. Histone H2AX is phosphorylated at sites of retroviral DNA integration but is dispensable for postintegration repair. J Biol Chem. 2004 Oct 29;279(44):45810-4.
The histone variant H2AX is rapidly phosphorylated (denoted gammaH2AX) in large chromatin domains ( foci) flanking double strand DNA ( dsDNA) breaks that are produced by ionizing radiation or genotoxic agents and during V(D)J recombination. H2AX-deficient cells and mice demonstrate increased sensitivity to dsDNA break damage, indicating an active role for gammaH2AX in DNA repair; however, gammaH2AX formation is not required for V(D)J recombination. The latter finding has suggested a greater dependence on gammaH2AX for anchoring free broken ends versus ends that are held together during programmed breakage-joining reactions. Retroviral DNA integration produces a unique intermediate in which a dsDNA break in host DNA is held together by the intervening viral DNA, and such a reaction provides a useful model to distinguish gammaH2AX functions. We found that integration promotes transient formation of gammaH2AX at retroviral integration sites as detected by both immunocytological and chromatin immunoprecipitation methods. These results provide the first direct evidence for the association of newly integrated viral DNA with a protein species that is an established marker for the onset of a DNA damage response. We also show that H2AX is not required for repair of the retroviral integration intermediate as determined by stable transduction. These observations provide independent support for an anchoring model for the function of gammaH2AX in chromatin repair.
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Skalka
Katz
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Taganov KD, Cuesta I, Daniel R, Cirillo LA, Katz RA, Zaret KS, Skalka AM. Integrase-specific enhancement and suppression of retroviral DNA integration by compacted chromatin structure in vitro. J Virol. 2004 Jun;78(11):5848-55.
Integration of viral DNA into the host chromosome is an obligatory step in retroviral replication and is dependent on the activity of the viral enzyme integrase. To examine the influence of chromatin structure on retroviral DNA integration in vitro, we used a model target comprising a 13-nucleosome extended array that includes binding sites for specific transcription factors and can be compacted into a higher-ordered structure. We found that the efficiency of in vitro integration catalyzed by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) integrase was decreased after compaction of this target with histone H1. In contrast, integration by avian sarcoma virus (ASV) integrase was more efficient after compaction by either histone H1 or a high salt concentration, suggesting that the compacted structure enhances this reaction. Furthermore, although site-specific binding of transcription factors HNF3 and GATA4 blocked ASV DNA integration in extended nucleosome arrays, local opening of! H1-compacted chromatin by HNF3 had no detectable effect on integration, underscoring the preference of ASV for compacted chromatin. Our results indicate that chromatin structure affects integration site selection of the HIV-1 and ASV integrases in opposite ways. These distinct properties of integrases may also affect target site selection in vivo, resulting in an important bias against or in favor of integration into actively transcribed host DNA.
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Zaret
Skalka
Katz
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Narezkina A, Taganov KD, Litwin S, Stoyanova R, Hayashi J, Seeger C, Skalka AM, Katz RA. Genome-wide analyses of avian sarcoma virus integration sites. J Virol. 2004 Nov;78(21):11656-63.
The chromosomal features that influence retroviral integration site selection are not well understood. Here, we report the mapping of 226 avian sarcoma virus (ASV) integration sites in the human genome. The results show that the sites are distributed over all chromosomes, and no global bias for integration site selection was detected. However, RNA polymerase II transcription units (protein-encoding genes) appear to be favored targets of ASV integration. The integration frequency within genes is similar to that previously described for murine leukemia virus but distinct from the higher frequency observed with human immunodeficiency virus type 1. We found no evidence for preferred ASV integration sites over the length of genes and immediate flanking regions. Microarray analysis of uninfected HeLa cells revealed that the expression levels of ASV target genes were similar to the median level for all genes represented in the array. Although expressed genes were targets for integr ation, we found no preference for integration into highly expressed genes. Our results provide a more detailed description of the chromosomal features that may influence ASV integration and support the idea that distinct, virus-specific mechanisms mediate integration site selection. Such differences may be relevant to viral pathogenesis and provide utility in retroviral vector design.
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Seeger
Skalka
Litwin
Katz
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