1. Academic Validation
  2. Interaction of transportin-SR2 with Ras-related nuclear protein (Ran) GTPase

Interaction of transportin-SR2 with Ras-related nuclear protein (Ran) GTPase

  • J Biol Chem. 2013 Aug 30;288(35):25603-25613. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M113.484345.
Oliver Taltynov 1 Jonas Demeulemeester 1 Frauke Christ 1 Stéphanie De Houwer 1 Vicky G Tsirkone 2 Melanie Gerard 1 Stephen D Weeks 2 Sergei V Strelkov 2 Zeger Debyser 3
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 From the Laboratory for Molecular Virology and Gene Therapy and.
  • 2 Laboratory for Biocrystallography, KU Leuven, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium.
  • 3 From the Laboratory for Molecular Virology and Gene Therapy and. Electronic address: zeger.debyser@med.kuleuven.be.
Abstract

The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) and other lentiviruses are capable of infecting non-dividing cells and, therefore, need to be imported into the nucleus before integration into the host cell chromatin. Transportin-SR2 (TRN-SR2, Transportin-3, TNPO3) is a cellular karyopherin implicated in nuclear import of HIV-1. A model in which TRN-SR2 imports the viral preintegration complex into the nucleus is supported by direct interaction between TRN-SR2 and HIV-1 integrase (IN). Residues in the C-terminal domain of HIV-1 IN that mediate binding to TRN-SR2 were recently delineated. As for most nuclear import cargoes, the driving force behind HIV-1 preintegration complex import is likely a gradient of the GDP- and GTP-bound forms of Ran, a small GTPase. In this study we offer biochemical and structural characterization of the interaction between TRN-SR2 and Ran. By size exclusion chromatography we demonstrate stable complex formation of TRN-SR2 and RanGTP in solution. Consistent with the behavior of normal nuclear import cargoes, HIV-1 IN is released from the complex with TRN-SR2 by RanGTP. Although in concentrated solutions TRN-SR2 by itself was predominantly present as a dimer, the TRN-SR2-RanGTP complex was significantly more compact. Further analysis supported a model wherein one monomer of TRN-SR2 is bound to one monomer of RanGTP. Finally, we present a homology model of the TRN-SR2-RanGTP complex that is in excellent agreement with the experimental small angle x-ray scattering data.

Keywords

GTPase; HIV-1; Homology Modeling; Host-Pathogen Interactions; Nuclear Transport; Protein-Protein Interactions; X-ray Scattering.

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