Hairpin-induced tRNA-mediated (HITME) recombination in HIV-1

Open Access
Authors
  • P. Konstantinova
  • P. de Haan
  • A.T. Das
  • B. Berkhout
Publication date 2006
Journal Nucleic Acids Research
Volume | Issue number 34 | 8
Pages (from-to) 2206-2218
Organisations
  • Faculty of Medicine (AMC-UvA)
Abstract
Recombination due to template switching during reverse transcription is a major source of genetic variability in retroviruses. In the present study we forced a recombination event in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) by electroporation of T cells with DNA from a molecular HIV-1 clone that has a 300 bp long hairpin structure in the Nef gene (HIV-lhNef). HIV-lhNef does not replicate, but replication-competent escape variants emerged in four independent cultures. The major part of the hairpin was deleted in all escape viruses. In three cases, the hairpin deletion was linked to patch insertion of tRNA(asp), tRNA(glu) or tRNA(trp) sequences. The tRNAs were inserted in the viral genome in the antisense orientation, indicating that tRNA-mediated recombination occurred during minus-strand DNA synthesis. We here propose a mechanistic model for this hairpin-induced tRNA-mediated (HITME) recombination. The transient role of the cellular tRNA molecule as enhancer of retroviral recombination is illustrated by the eventual removal of inserted tRNA sequences by a subsequent recombination/deletion event
Document type Article
Published at https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkl226
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