Vpr

Vpr is a Human immunodeficiency virus gene and protein product.[1][2]

VPR
solution structure of hiv-1 vpr (13-33) peptide in micells
Identifiers
SymbolVPR
PfamPF00522
InterProIPR000012
SCOPe1dsk / SUPFAM
TCDB1.A.42

Vpr stands for "Viral Protein R". Vpr, a 96 amino acid 14-kDa protein, plays an important role in regulating nuclear import of the HIV-1 pre-integration complex, and is required for virus replication in non-dividing cells such as macrophages. Vpr also induces G2 cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in proliferating cells, which can result in immune dysfunction.[3][4]

Vpr is also immunosuppressive due to its ability to sequester a proinflammatory transcriptional activator in the cytoplasm. HIV-2 contains both a Vpr protein and a related (by sequence homology) Vpx protein (Viral Protein X). Two functions of Vpr in HIV-1 are split between Vpr and Vpx in HIV-2, with the HIV-2 Vpr protein inducing cell cycle arrest and the Vpx protein required for nuclear import.

Vpr-Binding Protein

Vpr-binding protein (VprBP) is a 1,507-amino-acid human protein that contains conserved domains, including YXXY repeats, the Lis homology motif, and WD40 repeats.[5] VprBP acts as a substrate-recognition unit when associated with DNA damage-binding protein 1 (DDB1) as part of a CUL4–DDB1 E3 ubiquitin ligase complex.[5] When bound to Vpr, VprBP allows Vpr to modulate the catalytic activity of the CUL4–DDB1 complex, inducing G2 cell cycle arrest in infected cells.[5]

VprBP also regulates p53-induced transcription and apoptotic pathways. p53 is an important tumor suppressor which induces either cell cycle arrest or apoptosis in response to DNA damage.[5]

In-vitro studies of Vpr

The lack of an in vitro cell culture system that demonstrated a deficit in replication upon infection with viruses in the absence of Vpr has led to some mystery in the function of Vpr. Recently, there has been experiments on monocyte-derived dendritic cells (MDDCs) using a novel in-vitro infection system. These infected human dendritic cells showed a slower rate of replication when deprived of the Vpr protein in HIV-1 cells. This replication difference occurred in a single round of infection. This was shown to be due to decreased transcriptional output from the integrated HIV viral genome. Using mutational analysis (biochemical identification of mutational changes in a nucleotide sequence), prevention of cell cycle progression into mitosis was shown to be required for LTR-mediated viral expression. These findings suggest that the evolutionarily secured G2 cell cycle arrest function of Vpr (Viral Protein R) is essential for HIV-1 replication. Furthermore, this innovative in-vitro culture system will allow researchers to address mechanisms underlying Vpr-mediated enhancement of HIV-1 replication.[6]

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References

  1. Vpr+Gene+Products,+Human+Immunodeficiency+Virus at the US National Library of Medicine Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
  2. Genes,+Vpr at the US National Library of Medicine Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
  3. Bukrinsky M, Adzhubei A (1999). "Viral protein R of HIV-1". Reviews in Medical Virology. 9 (1): 39–49. doi:10.1002/(SICI)1099-1654(199901/03)9:1<39::AID-RMV235>3.0.CO;2-3. PMID 10371671.
  4. Muthumani K, Choo AY, Zong WX, Madesh M, Hwang DS, Premkumar A, Thieu KP, Emmanuel J, Kumar S, Thompson CB, Weiner DB (February 2006). "The HIV-1 Vpr and glucocorticoid receptor complex is a gain-of-function interaction that prevents the nuclear localization of PARP-1". Nature Cell Biology. 8 (2): 170–9. doi:10.1038/ncb1352. PMC 3142937. PMID 16429131.
  5. Kim K, Heo K, Choi J, Jackson S, Kim H, Xiong Y, An W (February 2012). "Vpr-binding protein antagonizes p53-mediated transcription via direct interaction with H3 tail". Molecular and Cellular Biology. 32 (4): 783–96. doi:10.1128/MCB.06037-11. PMC 3272969. PMID 22184063.
  6. Miller CM, Akiyama H, Agosto LM, Emery A, Ettinger CR, Swanstrom RI, Henderson AJ, Gummuluru S (July 2017). "Virion-Associated Vpr Alleviates a Postintegration Block to HIV-1 Infection of Dendritic Cells". Journal of Virology. 91 (13). doi:10.1128/JVI.00051-17. PMC 5469257. PMID 28424288.
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