Visualizing Association of the Retroviral Gag Protein with Unspliced Viral RNA in the Nucleus
Rebecca J. Kaddis Maldonado, Breanna L. Rice, Eunice C. Chen, Kevin M. Tuffy, Estelle Chiari, Kelly M. Fahrbach, Thomas J. Hope, Leslie J. Parent
Abstract
Retroviruses cause severe diseases in animals and humans, including cancer and acquired immunodeficiency syndromes. To propagate infection, retroviruses assemble new virus particles that contain viral proteins and unspliced vRNA to use as gRNA. Despite the critical requirement for gRNA packaging, the molecular mechanisms governing the identification and selection of gRNA by the Gag protein remain poorly understood. In this report, we demonstrate that the Rous sarcoma virus (RSV) Gag protein colocalizes with unspliced vRNA in the nucleus in the interchromatin space. Using live-cell confocal imaging, RSV Gag and unspliced vRNA were observed to move together from inside the nucleus across the nuclear envelope, suggesting that the Gag-gRNA complex initially forms in the nucleus and undergoes nuclear export into the cytoplasm as a viral ribonucleoprotein (vRNP) complex.