1. Academic Validation
  2. HIV-1 Nef promotes infection by excluding SERINC5 from virion incorporation

HIV-1 Nef promotes infection by excluding SERINC5 from virion incorporation

  • Nature. 2015 Oct 8;526(7572):212-7. doi: 10.1038/nature15399.
Annachiara Rosa 1 Ajit Chande 1 Serena Ziglio 1 Veronica De Sanctis 2 Roberto Bertorelli 2 Shih Lin Goh 3 Sean M McCauley 3 Anetta Nowosielska 3 Stylianos E Antonarakis 4 5 Jeremy Luban 3 Federico Andrea Santoni 4 Massimo Pizzato 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 University of Trento, Centre for Integrative Biology, 38123 Trento, Italy.
  • 2 University of Trento, Laboratory of Biomolecular Sequence and Structure Analysis for Health, NGS facility, 38123 Trento, Italy.
  • 3 University of Massachusetts Medical School, Program in Molecular Medicine, Worcester, Massachusetts 01605, USA.
  • 4 University of Geneva, Department of Genetic Medicine and Development, Geneva 1211, Switzerland.
  • 5 iGE3 Institute of Genetics and Genomics of Geneva, Geneva 1211, Switzerland.
Abstract

HIV-1 Nef, a protein important for the development of AIDS, has well-characterized effects on host membrane trafficking and receptor downregulation. By an unidentified mechanism, Nef increases the intrinsic infectivity of HIV-1 virions in a host-cell-dependent manner. Here we identify the host transmembrane protein SERINC5, and to a lesser extent SERINC3, as a potent inhibitor of HIV-1 particle infectivity that is counteracted by Nef. SERINC5 localizes to the plasma membrane, where it is efficiently incorporated into budding HIV-1 virions and impairs subsequent virion penetration of susceptible target cells. Nef redirects SERINC5 to a Rab7-positive endosomal compartment and thereby excludes it from HIV-1 particles. The ability to counteract SERINC5 was conserved in Nef encoded by diverse primate immunodeficiency viruses, as well as in the structurally unrelated glycosylated Gag from murine leukaemia virus. These examples of functional conservation and convergent evolution emphasize the fundamental importance of SERINC5 as a potent anti-retroviral factor.

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