1. Academic Validation
  2. The human endosomal sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT-I) and its role in HIV-1 budding

The human endosomal sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT-I) and its role in HIV-1 budding

  • J Biol Chem. 2004 Aug 20;279(34):36059-71. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M405226200.
Melissa D Stuchell 1 Jennifer E Garrus Barbara Müller Kirsten M Stray Sanaz Ghaffarian Rena McKinnon Hans-Georg Kräusslich Scott G Morham Wesley I Sundquist
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Biochemistry, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84132-3201, USA.
Abstract

Efficient human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) budding requires an interaction between the PTAP late domain in the viral p6(Gag) protein and the cellular protein TSG101. In yeast, Vps23p/TSG101 binds both Vps28p and Vps37p to form the soluble ESCRT-I complex, which functions in sorting ubiquitylated protein cargoes into multivesicular bodies. Human cells also contain ESCRT-I, but the VPS37 component(s) have not been identified. Bioinformatics and yeast two-hybrid screening methods were therefore used to identify four novel human proteins (VPS37A-D) that share weak but significant sequence similarity with yeast Vps37p and to demonstrate that VPS37A and VPS37B bind TSG101. Detailed studies produced four lines of evidence that human VPS37B is a Vps37p ortholog. 1) TSG101 bound to several different sites on VPS37B, including a putative coiled-coil region and a PTAP motif. 2) TSG101 and VPS28 co-immunoprecipitated with VPS37B-FLAG, and the three proteins comigrated together in soluble complexes of the correct size for human ESCRT-I ( approximately 350 kDa). 3) Like TGS101, VPS37B became trapped on aberrant endosomal compartments in the presence of VPS4A proteins lacking ATPase activity. 4) Finally, VPS37B could recruit TSG101/ESCRT-I activity and thereby rescue the budding of both mutant Gag particles and HIV-1 viruses lacking native late domains. Further studies of ESCRT-I revealed that TSG101 mutations that inhibited PTAP or VPS28 binding blocked HIV-1 budding. Taken together, these experiments define new components of the human ESCRT-I complex and characterize several TSG101 protein/protein interactions required for HIV-1 budding and infectivity.

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