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Role of RNA structural plasticity in modulating HIV-1 genome packaging and translation

Saif Yasin, Sydney L. Lesko, Siarhei Kharytonchyk, Joshua D. Brown, Issac Chaudry, Samuel Geleta, Ndeh F. Tadzong, Mei Y. Zheng, Heer Patel, Gabriel Kengni, Emma Neubert, Jeanelle Mae C. Quiambao, Ghazal Becker, Frances Grace Ghinger, Sreeyasha Thapa, A’Lyssa Williams, Michelle H. Radov, Kellie X. Boehlert, Nele M. Hollmann, Karndeep Singh, James W. Bruce, Jan Marchant, Alice Telesnitsky, Nathan M. Sherer, Michael F. Summers

2024Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

HIV-1 transcript function is controlled in part by twinned transcriptional start site usage, where 5' capped RNAs beginning with a single guanosine (1G) are preferentially packaged into progeny virions as genomic RNA (gRNA) whereas those beginning with three sequential guanosines (3G) are retained in cells as mRNAs. In 3G transcripts, one of the additional guanosines base pairs with a cytosine located within a conserved 5' polyA element, resulting in formation of an extended 5' polyA structure as opposed to the hairpin structure formed in 1G RNAs. To understand how this remodeling influences overall transcript function, we applied in vitro biophysical studies with in-cell genome packaging and competitive translation assays to native and 5' polyA mutant transcripts generated with promoters that differentially produce 1G or 3G RNAs. We identified mutations that stabilize the 5' polyA hairpin structure in 3G RNAs, which promote RNA dimerization and Gag binding without sequestering the 5' cap. None of these 3G transcripts were competitively packaged, confirming that cap exposure is a dominant negative determinant of viral genome packaging. For all RNAs examined, conformations that favored 5' cap exposure were both poorly packaged and more efficiently translated than those that favored 5' cap sequestration. We propose that structural plasticity of 5' polyA and other conserved RNA elements place the 5' leader on a thermodynamic tipping point for low-energetic (~3 kcal/mol) control of global transcript structure and function.

Topics & Concepts

RNABiologyGuanosineGenomeTranslation (biology)Nucleic acid structureBase pairGeneticsNon-coding RNASmall nucleolar RNAMessenger RNACell biologyComputational biologyDNAGeneHIV Research and TreatmentRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsRNA Research and Splicing
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