Publication | Open Access
HIV-1 Tat Protein Interacts with Mammalian Capping Enzyme and Stimulates Capping of TAR RNA
63
Citations
41
References
2001
Year
Viral ReplicationMolecular BiologyEnzyme RecruitmentTranscriptional RegulationSignaling PathwayHuman RetrovirusHiv-1 Tat ProteinHiv Gene ExpressionCell SignalingRna ProcessingDna ReplicationVirologyHiv Tat ProteinHivGene ExpressionCell BiologyAids PathogenesisBiomolecular EngineeringTranscription RegulationMammalian Capping EnzymeSignal TransductionNatural SciencesAntiviral ResponseSystems BiologyMedicineTar Rna
HIV gene expression is subject to a transcriptional checkpoint, whereby negative transcription elongation factors induce an elongation block that is overcome by HIV Tat protein in conjunction with P-TEFb. P-TEFb is a cyclin-dependent kinase that catalyzes Tat-dependent phosphorylation of Ser-5 of the Pol II C-terminal domain (CTD). Ser-5 phosphorylation confers on the CTD the ability to recruit the mammalian mRNA capping enzyme (Mce1) and stimulate its guanylyltransferase activity. Here we show that Tat spearheads a second and novel pathway of capping enzyme recruitment and activation via a direct physical interaction between the C-terminal domain of Tat and Mce1. Tat stimulates the guanylyltransferase and triphosphatase activities of Mce1 and thereby enhances the otherwise low efficiency of cap formation on a TAR stem-loop RNA. Our findings suggest that multiple mechanisms exist for coupling transcription elongation and mRNA processing.
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