1. Academic Validation
  2. Structure-function analyses point to a polynucleotide-accommodating groove essential for APOBEC3A restriction activities

Structure-function analyses point to a polynucleotide-accommodating groove essential for APOBEC3A restriction activities

  • J Virol. 2011 Feb;85(4):1765-76. doi: 10.1128/JVI.01651-10.
Yannick Bulliard 1 Iñigo Narvaiza Alessandro Bertero Shyam Peddi Ute F Röhrig Millán Ortiz Vincent Zoete Nataly Castro-Díaz Priscilla Turelli Amalio Telenti Olivier Michielin Matthew D Weitzman Didier Trono
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 School of Life Sciences and Frontiers-in-Genetics National Program, Ecole Polytechnique Fe´de´rale de Lausanne,1015 Lausanne, Switzerland.
Abstract

Members of the human APOBEC3 family of editing enzymes can inhibit various mobile genetic elements. APOBEC3A (A3A) can block the retrotransposon LINE-1 and the parvovirus adeno-associated virus type 2 (AAV-2) but does not inhibit retroviruses. In contrast, APOBEC3G (A3G) can block retroviruses but has only limited effects on AAV-2 or LINE-1. What dictates this differential target specificity remains largely undefined. Here, we modeled the structure of A3A based on its homology with the C-terminal domain of A3G and further compared the sequence of human A3A to those of 11 nonhuman primate orthologues. We then used these data to perform a mutational analysis of A3A, examining its ability to restrict LINE-1, AAV-2, and foreign plasmid DNA and to edit a single-stranded DNA substrate. The results revealed an essential functional role for the predicted single-stranded DNA-docking groove located around the A3A catalytic site. Within this region, amino acid differences between A3A and A3G are predicted to affect the shape of the polynucleotide-binding groove. Correspondingly, transferring some of these A3A residues to A3G endows the latter protein with the ability to block LINE-1 and AAV-2. These results suggest that the target specificity of APOBEC3 family members is partly defined by structural features influencing their interaction with polynucleotide substrates.

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