The central region of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 p6 protein (Gag residues S14–I31) is dispensable for the virus in vitro

Gabriela Bleiber1, Solange Peters1, Raquel Martinez1, Dusan Cmarko3, Pascal Meylan1,2 and Amalio Telenti1,2

1 Division of Infectious Diseases, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland
2 Institute of Microbiology, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland
3 University Hospital, and Center of Electron Microscopy, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland

Correspondence
Amalio Telenti
amalio.telenti{at}hospvd.ch


   ABSTRACT
Top
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
 
The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 p6 region encodes p6Gag and the transframe p6Pol protein. The Gag frame encodes an N-terminal late assembly L domain and a C-terminal Vpr binding domain. In the Pol frame, substitution at a C-terminal motif decreases protease autocleavage. The role of the highly polymorphic central region of p6, comprising amino acids S14–I31 (p6Gag) and R20–D39 (p6Pol), is unclear. Analysis of this central region demonstrated that 35 % of p6Gag appears to be dispensable for virus propagation in vitro and smaller deletion and insertion polymorphisms can be tolerated in vivo. Extensive Pol deletion ({Delta}R20–D39, 42 % of p6Pol) did not alter protease autocleavage.


   INTRODUCTION
Top
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
 
The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) p6 region encodes two proteins, p6Gag (52 amino acids) and the transframe p6Pol (48 amino acids). Two functional domains have been mapped to the Gag frame: an N-terminal PT(S)AP motif, which represents the late (L) virus assembly domain (Göttlinger et al., 1991; Yu et al., 1995, 1998) and a C-terminal LXXLF sequence, which participates in the incorporation of Vpr into particles (Lu et al., 1995; Kondo & Göttlinger, 1996). PTAP binds Tsg101, a protein involved in vacuolar cell sorting (Vogt, 2000; Garrus et al., 2001; VerPlank et al., 2001). In addition, a fairly conserved KELY motif is present at the boundary between the hydrophilic and the hydrophobic domains of p6Gag. Substitution of Y36 of KELY in association with a substitution at downstream L41 results in reduced infectivity and failure to incorporate the Env protein into virus particles (Ott et al., 1999). In the Pol frame, the transframe protein encoded by the p6pol region acts as a regulator of protease activation (Partin et al., 1991; Louis et al., 1999; Paulus et al., 1999). The C-terminal SNSF motif has been identified as critical for protease autocleavage (Partin et al., 1991). The role of the central region of p6, comprising amino acids S14–I31 of p6Gag or R20–D39 of p6Pol, is unclear. Except when specifically referring to p6Pol experiments, p6 substitutions will be described using p6Gag amino acid numbering, although Gag substitutions may be accompanied by transframe p6Pol changes.

The identification of extensive deletion and insertion polymorphisms in the central protein region, including deletions of up to six amino acids and duplication of the conserved motif K27Q28E29 (KQE) (Peters et al., 2001), led us to analyse the role of this region in the virus life cycle. For this purpose, we constructed HIV-1 molecular clones carrying: (i) p6 deletions observed in circulating virions in HIV-1-infected individuals; (ii) experimental deletions that spanned up to 20 amino acids; and (iii) the KQE duplication.


   METHODS
Top
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
 
Analysis of p6 sequences.
RNA from plasma virions from HIV-1-infected patients (n=296) was isolated, reverse transcribed, amplified via nested PCR and sequenced as previously described (Bleiber et al., 2001).

Virus culture conditions.
Peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) were cultured in RPMI 1640 supplemented with Glutamax (2 mM) (Gibco-BRL Life Technologies), gentamicin (50 µg ml-1), foetal calf serum (FCS; 20 %, v/v) and IL-2 (10 U ml-1). 293 T cells were maintained in RPMI 1640, Glutamax and gentamicin, with the addition of 10 % FCS. HeLa, COS-7 and GHOST cells (stably transduced with chemokine receptor CXCR4 and with the green fluorescence protein (GFP) linked to the HIV-1 long terminal repeat; obtained through the NIH AIDS Research and Reference Reagent Program from Drs D. Littman and V. K. Ramani) were maintained in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM) supplemented with Glutamax (2 mM), gentamicin (50 µg ml-1) and 10 % FCS. For GHOST cells, selective medium also contained puromycin (1 µg ml-1; Sigma), hygromycin (100 µg ml-1; Gibco-BRL Life Technologies) and G-418 (500 µg ml-1; Gibco-BRL Life Technologies).

Recombinant clones.
Deletions of two to six amino acids observed in vivo, the duplication K27Q28E29 and a number of experimental deletions of up to 20 residues in p6 were introduced into pNL4-3 by site-directed mutagenesis (Stratagene). The small deletions {Delta}S14–E19, {Delta}G18–T21, {Delta}S14–R16, {Delta}F17–G18, {Delta}T21–T23, {Delta}P30–I31, {Delta}E12–E13 and {Delta}K27–E29 were introduced by a one-step single mutagenesis reaction. The larger deletion {Delta}S14–T23 used {Delta}S14–E19 as template, {Delta}S14–I31 used {Delta}S14–T23 and {Delta}E12–I31 was built on {Delta}S14–I31. All constructs were confirmed by sequencing. Viruses were obtained by HeLa cell transfection (Geneporter transfection reagent; Axon Laboratories).

Virion infectivity.
GHOST/CXCR4 cells in 48-well plates (3x104 cells per well) were infected in triplicate with recombinant virus (3000 pg p24 antigen) as described earlier (Bleiber et al., 2001). The infectious titre was determined by FACS analysis as the proportion of GFP-positive cells.

Replication kinetics.
PBLs (3x106 cells) were infected with virus (1500 pg p24 antigen) in 1 ml of supplemented RPMI 1640 for 2 h. Residual inoculum was removed by washing. Aliquots of culture supernatant were collected to monitor virus replication using an HIV-1 p24 antigen ELISA (HIV AG-1 Monoclonal; Abbott).

Protease autoprocessing.
Autocleavage efficiency of viral protease was assessed by expression of a nucleocapsid-transframe-p6Pol-protease (NC-TF-p6Pol-PR) polyprotein in a transcription and translation TNT T7 rabbit reticulocyte lysate (Promega), following a published protocol (Peters et al., 2001). Deletions and duplication in p6 were introduced into pET3/NC-TF-p6Pol-PR by site-directed mutagenesis. Constructs were confirmed by sequencing. Samples of the TNT reaction were resolved by 15 % SDS-PAGE and processing efficiency evaluated by Instant Imager (Packard Instruments). Results were expressed as the ratio of unprocessed precursor (NC-TF-p6Pol-PRx100) to total protein synthesis (precursor+NC-TF-p6Pol+PR) after a 30 min reaction.

Protein analysis.
Particle- and cell-associated viral proteins were analysed as previously described (Bleiber et al., 2001). Briefly, transfected COS-7 cells in a 100 mm dish were metabolically labelled with 5 ml DMEM (methionine/cysteine-free, 10 % dialysed FCS) containing 40 µCi [35S]methionine/cysteine ml-1 ([35S]EasyTag EXPRESS; NEN Life Science Products) for 12–17 h. Virions in the culture supernatant were concentrated by ultracentrifugation (90 min, 10 0000 g, 4 °C) and lysed in radioimmunoprecipitation buffer (1 % NP-40, 0·5 % deoxycholic acid, 0·9 % SDS, 2 mM EDTA, 150 mM NaCl, 50 mM Tris/HCl, pH 8·0), supplemented with complete protease inhibitor cocktail (Roche Diagnostics). Cells were washed, lysed in radioimmunoprecipitation assay buffer and cellular debris was removed by centrifugation. Particle- and cell-associated viral proteins were immunoprecipitated from lysates using anti-HIV human immunoglobulin (NIH AIDS Research and Reference Reagent Program) and protein A–Sepharose CL-4B beads (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) and separated by SDS-PAGE (5–15 % gradient gel). Radioactivity content was quantified using Instant Imager.


   RESULTS
Top
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
 
Recombinant p6 clones
Among 296 patients, we identified 17 (5·7 %) with viruses carrying deletion polymorphisms of two to six amino acids in the region from S14 to I31 of p6Gag. Six representative natural deletions were introduced by site-directed mutagenesis in pNL4-3. The collection of deletion clones was completed by introducing five extensive experimental deletions in NL4-3. In addition, we investigated insertion polymorphisms observed at or around the KQE conserved motif. In 14 (4·7 %) patients, the majority of circulating viruses presented the following insertions, generally after E29: KQSQ, QKEQKE, PK, KEKE, QKQEL, PMRQE, QKQE, TPSQ, QK (n=3), KDRE, KQ and KQE. The KQEKQE variant was introduced by site-directed mutagenesis in pNL4-3. At the time of sequence analysis, most patients carrying viruses with deletions or KQE motif insertions were immunosuppressed and presented significant levels of virus replication (Table 1).


View this table:
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Table 1. Clinical characteristics of patients carrying viruses with deletion/duplication polymorphisms in p6

 
Early virus cycle and replication phenotype of p6 clones
There was no profound defect in infectivity for clones with natural or experimental polymorphisms in p6 (Fig. 1A). With respect to wild-type (100 %), {Delta}S14–E19 exhibited the highest (mean±SEM, 161±13 %, P=0·02), and {Delta}E12–E13 the lowest (74±14 %, P=0·02) infectivity. The coefficient of variation of the single-cycle infectivity assay used was 15 % (intra-assay) and 13 % (inter-assay), which could account for some of the observed differences. An apparently normal infectivity does not exclude a small defect in the late virus cycle that would be amplified during replication kinetics.



View larger version (34K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 1. Infectivity, replication and rate of protease autocleavage of p6 clones with natural and experimental polymorphisms. (A) One-cycle infectivity of p6 clones was determined by FACS analysis of GHOST/CXCR4 cell fluorescence and expressed as a percentage of the wild-type NL4-3 value (black bar). Error bars indicate the range of values (±SEM) obtained from triplicate data points in one of two experiments, in which comparable results were obtained. (B) Replication kinetics were performed in PBLs. Cells were infected with p24-normalized amounts of virus particles. The data are from one of three experiments, in which comparable results were obtained. (C) Protease autocleavage in selected clones {Delta}R20–R21, {Delta}E22–D39 and {Delta}R20–D39 (p6Pol amino acid numbering) was estimated by using an NC-TF-p6Pol-PR expression vector in a reticulocyte lysate transcription and translation (TNT) system. Shown are the processing patterns after 30 min of transcription/translation, including the unprocessed product of a D25E construct, generating an inactive viral protease (PR-). pETWT carries the NL4-3 wild-type sequence.

 
In replication kinetics, the various clones representing natural variants displayed a mean±SEM relative replication rate of 98±4 % compared with wild-type (100 %) (Fig. 1B). Among clones representing experimental deletions, only constructs lacking amino acid residues E12 and E13 ({Delta}E12–E13 and {Delta}E12–I31) exhibited a statistically significant diminished replication pattern as demonstrated by a reduction in peak p24 production to 54±5 and 25±2 %, respectively, with respect to wild-type (P<0·001 for both). Deletion or insertion at KQE did not result in a measurable deficit. The coefficient of variation of the replication kinetics assay was 17 % (intra-assay) and 7 % (inter-assay), which could explain some of the observed differences.

Late virus cycle phenotype of p6 clones
p6Pol has been implicated in the regulation of viral protease autoactivation (Louis et al., 1999; Paulus et al., 1999). As changes introduced in p6Gag may also modify p6Pol, we assessed the rate of protease autocleavage for the various constructs using an in vitro transcription and translation assay (Fig. 2). A range of autocleavage activity was observed with respect to the wild-type (100 %), with {Delta}F17–G18 exhibiting the highest (mean±SEM, 150±1 %, P=0·02) and {Delta}E12–E13 the lowest (73±5 %, P=0·02) activity. Particularly relevant was the observation that the clone with the most profound replication impairment and the largest deletion ({Delta}R20–D39, 42 % of p6Pol) did not present a deficit in autoprocessing (Fig. 1C). The inter-assay coefficient of variation was 7·5 %. Overall, only clone {Delta}E12–E13 presented deficits in infectivity, replication and protease autocleavage (Fig. 2).



View larger version (25K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 2. Summary of data on infectivity, replication and autocleavage analyses of natural (black bars) and experimental (grey bars) constructs. Results are given as percentages relative to the wild-type NL4-3 (100 %). *, Statistically significant differences (P<0·05) compared with wild-type NL4-3.

 
Analysis of protein maturation in infected cells and virions was carried out for the clones with the most profound impairment, {Delta}E12–E13 and {Delta}E12–I31, and for {Delta}S14–I31. SDS-PAGE analysis did not reveal major defects or delays in Gag–Pol precursor processing, as assessed by gel separation of labelled cell-associated and supernatant viral proteins (Fig. 3). Electron microscopic analysis of wild-type and mutant clones demonstrated comparable budding activity and particle morphology (data not shown).



View larger version (65K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
 
Fig. 3. Protein processing and maturation profiles in cell lysates (right panel) and supernatant virions (left panel) of two independent clones each of {Delta}E12–E13, {Delta}S14–I31 and {Delta}E12–I31. COS-7 cells were transfected and metabolically labelled. Proteins in cell-associated particles and virions were immunoprecipitated with anti-HIV human IgG and analysed by SDS-PAGE and fluorography. Precursor and processed viral proteins are indicated.

 
We assessed the phosphorylation status of p6Gag by virus-associated kinases for clone {Delta}S14–E19 (deletion of one of 12 putative phosphorylation sites) (Muller et al., 2002), {Delta}T21–T23 (deletion of three of 12 sites), {Delta}S14–T23 (deletion of four of 12 sites) and {Delta}S14–I31 (deletion of five of 12 sites). Phosphorylation was observed for all clones with the possible exception of the large deletion {Delta}S14–I31 (results not shown). However, the low degree of phosphorylation obtained in vitro did not allow a formal quantitative analysis.


   DISCUSSION
Top
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
 
The conserved p6Gag motifs PTAP (the viral L domain), LXXLF (Vpr packaging) and in the Pol frame, SNSF, with a role in protease activation have been extensively evaluated. In addition, mutational analysis of p6 function has shown that truncation of p6 at various positions or specific amino acid changes alter virus production and propagation significantly (Göttlinger et al., 1991; Huang et al., 1995; Yu et al., 1995, 1998; Garnier et al., 1998; Dettenhofer & Yu, 1999; Ott et al., 1999; Peters et al., 2001). The present work contributes data on the central region of the p6 proteins, including the conserved motif KQE.

In vivo, viruses with deletions of up to six amino acids are not associated with unusual patterns of disease progression in patients infected with those strains. As T helper and CTL recognition epitopes have been described in p6 (HIV molecular immunology database, http://hiv-web-lanl.gov), one possibility is that deletion in this region contributes to escape from immune surveillance. In vitro, no deleterious phenotype of the corresponding molecular clones was observed. It is conceivable that there is a fitness cost associated with such deletions and that it could have been better estimated by competitive replication kinetics. However, testing of sequence variation outside its original genetic context makes interpretation of small differences in replication problematic. Surprisingly, more extensive deletions in the region between S14 and I31 or of the conserved KQE motif – polymorphisms that are never observed in vivo had little effect on virus propagation in vitro. The central region of p6 could be relevant in determining the level of phosphorylation of p6Gag (Muller et al., 2002). However, analysis of the phosphorylation status of various clones did not yield reliable quantitative data to assess the relevance of this phenomenon in the retention of this region in nature. The significance of the infectivity deficit of natural clone {Delta}P30–I31 in the absence of a replication deficit is unclear. We did not test for a potential role of central p6Gag region on Vpr incorporation, as no such impairment has been identified in previous analyses (Lu et al., 1995; Kondo & Gottlinger, 1996).

We assessed the effect of KQE domain deletion or duplication on virus replication. The lysine residue is the substrate for ubiquitin modification. Ubiquitin is attached by an isopeptide linkage between the C-terminal carboxyl group and the {varepsilon}-amino acid group of lysine. An estimated 2 % of the mature p6Gag of HIV-1 is monoubiquitinated (Ott et al., 1998) and there is a relationship between the level of free ubiquitin in the infected cell and the efficiency of virus release (Schubert et al., 2000). We have observed duplication of this motif in 4·7 % of clinical strains, a variation not associated with a specific in vitro or in vivo phenotype. KQE duplication could lead to changes in the interaction with the ubiquitination machinery and therefore the ubiquitination pattern of Gag. In contrast, KQE is never deleted in nature, although its absence in molecular clones was not deleterious in vitro. This is consistent with previous work indicating that substitution of the two lysine residues in p6Gag that are substrates for ubiquitin modification (K27 and K33) had no apparent effect on virus assembly or release (Ott et al., 2000). It has been proposed that when the preferred sites of ubiquitination are not available, other lysine residues may be used (Hou et al., 1994; Vogt, 2000; VerPlank et al., 2001).

Only extension of the deletion to include amino acid residues E12 and E13 led to markedly diminished replication. The role of the acidic motif (E)E is not well established. This motif is present as AE, ME, VE or LE following the L domain PTAP among various lentiviruses: simian immunodeficiency virus, feline immunodeficiency virus and caprine arthritis encephalitis virus. Rarely, EE, ME or AD can follow a PPPY or a double PPPY/PTAP late domain characteristic of various non-lentiviral retroviruses or some enveloped RNA viruses: vesicular stomatitis virus, Ebola and Marburg virus. The human T cell leukaemia virus 1 has a VE motif within a complex PPPYVEPTAP L domain.

Work by Garrus et al. (2001) indicates that substitution of E13 for alanine resulted in a modest reduction in binding affinity of Tsg101. Work by Martin-Serrano et al. (2001) described a GG for EE substitution leading to a minor decrease in Tsg101–Gag interaction and virion production and a moderately diminished viral infectivity. In our work, deletion of EE diminished viral infectivity and replication without evidence of major changes in protein maturation. Electron microscopy did not reveal changes in budding reminiscent of those reported for mutants lacking L-domain function – a failure of particles to ‘pinch off’. Demirov et al. (2002) indicated that premature termination at E12 markedly disrupts particle production, whereas truncations immediately downstream have no effect on virus production yet impaired virus replication, a phenotype reminiscent of {Delta}E12–E13. Similarly, mutations in p9 of equine infectious anaemia virus have been reported that have no apparent effect on virus production yet impair virus replication (Chen et al., 2001).

Thus, this paper highlights the fact that regions of the p6 gag open reading frame and the overlapping region in pol can be deleted without major consequences for virus replication in vitro or in vivo. The tolerance for polymorphism in this region may reflect a role of the central region of p6 as a linker structure that accommodates the constraints of the overlapping gag/pol open reading frames. Finally, this study underlines the need to investigate the conserved motif KQE using new approaches, given the questions that remain about its precise role in virus physiology.


   ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
 
This work was supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation. We thank A. Ciuffi and M. Muñoz for help and encouragement. We are grateful to the NIH AIDS Research and Reference Reagent Program for providing various reagents for this study.


   REFERENCES
Top
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
 
Bleiber, G., Munoz, M., Ciuffi, A., Meylan, P. & Telenti, A. (2001). Individual contribution of protease and reverse transcriptase to infectivity, replication and protein maturation of antiretroviral drug resistant human immunodeficiency virus type 1. J Virol 75, 3291–3300.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Chen, C., Li, F. & Montelaro, R. C. (2001). Functional roles of equine infectious anemia virus Gag p9 in viral budding and infection. J Virol 75, 9762–9770.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Demirov, D. G., Orenstein, J. M. & Freed, E. O. (2002). The late domain of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 p6 promotes virus release in a cell type-dependent manner. J Virol 76, 105–117.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Dettenhofer, M. & Yu, X. F. (1999). Proline residues in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 p6Gag exert a cell type-dependent effect on viral replication and virion incorporation of Pol proteins. J Virol 73, 4696–4704.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Garnier, L., Ratner, L., Rovinski, B., Cao, S.-X. & Wills, J. W. (1998). Particle size determinants in the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 Gag protein. J Virol 72, 4667–4677.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Garrus, J. E., von Schwedler, U. K., Pornillos, O. W. & 9 other authors (2001). Tsg101 and the vacuolar protein sorting pathway are essential for HIV-1 budding. Cell 107, 55–65.[Medline]

Göttlinger, H. G., Dorfman, T., Sodroski, J. G. & Haseltine, W. A. (1991). Effect of mutations affecting the p6 gag protein on human immunodeficiency virus particle release. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 88, 3195–3199.[Abstract]

Hou, D., Cenciarelli, C., Jensen, J. P., Nguygen, H. B. & Weissman, A. M. (1994). Activation-dependent ubiquitination of a T cell antigen receptor subunit on multiple intracellular lysines. J Biol Chem 269, 14244–14247.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Huang, M., Orenstein, J. M., Martin, M. A. & Freed, E. O. (1995). p6Gag is required for particle production from full-length human immunodeficiency virus type 1 molecular clones expressing protease. J Virol 69, 6810–6818.[Abstract]

Kondo, E. & Göttlinger, H. G. (1996). A conserved LXXLF sequence is the major determinant in p6gag required for the incorporation of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 Vpr. J Virol 70, 159–164.[Abstract]

Louis, J. M., Clore, G. M. & Gronenborn, A. M. (1999). Autoprocessing of HIV-1 protease is tightly coupled to protein folding. Nat Struct Biol 6, 868–875.[CrossRef][Medline]

Lu, Y. L., Bennett, R. P., Wills, J. W., Gorelick, R. & Ratner, L. (1995). A leucine triplet repeat sequence (LXX)4 in p6gag is important for Vpr incorporation into human immunodeficiency virus type 1 particles. J Virol 69, 6873–6879.[Abstract]

Martin-Serrano, J., Zang, T. & Bieniasz, P. D. (2001). HIV-1 and Ebola virus encode small peptide motifs that recruit Tsg101 to sites of particle assembly to facilitate egress. Nat Med 7, 1313–1319.[CrossRef][Medline]

Muller, B., Patschinsky, T. & Krausslich, H. G. (2002). The late-domain-containing protein p6 is the predominant phosphoprotein of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 particles. J Virol 76, 1015–1024.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Ott, D. E., Coren, L. V., Copeland, T. D. & 7 other authors (1998). Uquitin is covalently attached to the p6Gag proteins of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 and simian immunodeficiency virus and to the p12Gag protein of Moloney murine leukemia virus. J Virol 72, 2962–2968.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Ott, D. E., Chertova, E. N., Busch, L. K., Gagliardi, T. D. & Johnson, D. G. (1999). Mutational analysis of the hydrophobic tail of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 p6Gag protein produces a mutant that fails to package its envelope protein. J Virol 73, 19–28.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Ott, D. E., Coren, L. V., Chertova, E. N., Gagliardi, T. D. & Schubert, U. (2000). Ubiquitination of HIV-1 and MuLV Gag. Virology 278, 111–121.[CrossRef][Medline]

Partin, K., Zybarth, G., Ehrlich, L., DeCrombrugghe, M., Wimmer, E. & Carter, C. (1991). Deletion of sequences upstream of the proteinase improves the proteolytic processing of human immunodeficiency virus type 1. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 88, 4776–4780.[Abstract]

Paulus, C., Hellebrand, S., Tessmer, U., Wolf, H., Kräusslich, H.-G. & Wagner, R. (1999). Competitive inhibition of human immunodeficiency virus type-1 protease by the Gag–Pol transframe protein. J Biol Chem 274, 21539–21543.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Peters, S., Munoz, M., Yerly, S. & 8 other authors (2001). Resistance to nucleoside analog reverse transcriptase inhibitors mediated by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 p6 protein. J Virol 75, 9644–9653.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Schubert, U., Ott, D. E., Chertova, E. N., Welker, R., Tessmer, U., Princiotta, M. F., Bennink, J. R., Krausslich, H. G. & Yewdell, J. W. (2000). Proteasome inhibition interferes with Gag polyprotein processing, release, and maturation of HIV-1 and HIV-2. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 97, 13057–13062.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

VerPlank, L., Bouamr, F., LaGrassa, T. J., Agresta, B., Kikonyogo, A., Leis, J. & Carter, C. A. (2001). Tsg101, a homologue of ubiquitin-conjugating (E2) enzymes, binds the L domain in HIV type 1 Pr55Gag. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 98, 7724–7729.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Vogt, V. M. (2000). Ubiquitin in retrovirus assembly: actor or bystander? Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 97, 12945–12947.[Free Full Text]

Yu, X.-F., Matsuda, Z., Yu, Q.-C., Lee, T.-H. & Essex, M. (1995). Role of the C terminus Gag protein in human immunodeficiency virus type 1 virion assembly and maturation. J Gen Virol 76, 3171–3179.[Abstract]

Yu, X.-F., Dawson, L., Tian, C.-J., Flexner, C. & Dettenhofer, M. (1998). Mutations of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 p6Gag domain results in reduced retention of Pol proteins during virus assembly. J Virol 72, 3412–3417.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

Received 15 August 2003; accepted 23 December 2003.