Mutations in the RNase H domain of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase affect the initiation of DNA synthesis and the specificity of RNase H cleavage in vivo
- John G. Julias*,
- Mary Jane McWilliams*,
- Stefan G. Sarafianos†,‡,
- Edward Arnold†,‡, and
- Stephen H. Hughes*,§
- *HIV Drug Resistance Program, National Cancer Institute, P.O. Box B, Frederick, MD 21702-1201; and †Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine and ‡Department of Chemistry, Rutgers University, 679 Hoes Lane, Piscataway, NJ 08854-5638
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Edited by John M. Coffin, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, and approved May 14, 2002 (received for review March 1, 2002)
Abstract
Retroviral reverse transcriptases contain a DNA polymerase activity that can copy an RNA or DNA template and an RNase H activity that degrades the viral RNA genome during reverse transcription. RNase H makes both specific and nonspecific cleavages; specific cleavages are used to generate and remove the polypurine tract primer used for plus-strand DNA synthesis and to remove the tRNA primer used for minus-strand DNA synthesis. We generated mutations in an HIV-1-based vector to change amino acids in the RNase H domain that contact either the RNA and DNA strands. Some of these mutations affected the initiation of DNA synthesis, demonstrating an interdependence of the polymerase and RNase H activities of HIV-1 reverse transcription during viral DNA synthesis. The ends of the linear DNA form of the HIV-1 genome are defined by the specific RNase H cleavages that remove the plus- and minus-strand primers; these ends can be joined to form two-long-terminal repeat circles. Analysis of two-long-terminal repeat circle junctions showed that mutations in the RNase H domain affect the specificity of RNase H cleavage.
Footnotes
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↵ § To whom reprint requests should be addressed. E-mail: hughes{at}ncifcrf.gov.
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This paper was submitted directly (Track II) to the PNAS office.
- Abbreviations:
- 2-LTR,
- two long-terminal-repeat;
- RT,
- reverse transcriptase;
- pbs,
- primer-binding site;
- ppt,
- polypurine tract
- Copyright © 2002, The National Academy of Sciences





