Publication | Open Access
Differential Sensitivities of Tetherin Isoforms to Counteraction by Primate Lentiviruses
25
Citations
59
References
2014
Year
The ability of HIV-1 and related viruses to counteract a host antiviral protein, tetherin, is strictly maintained. The adaptation of the HIV-1 Vpu protein to counteract human tetherin is thought to have been one of the key events in the establishment of the HIV/AIDS pandemic. Recent evidence shows that tetherin is expressed as two isoforms and that Vpu preferentially targets the longer form. Here we show that unlike other virus-encoded countermeasures, such as those from primate viruses related to HIV-1, the enhanced ability to counteract the long tetherin isoform is conserved among HIV-1 strains that make up the majority of the human pandemic. This correlates with the ability of Vpu to induce long tetherin degradation. We speculate that functions associated with the human version of this isoform, such as an inflammatory signaling capacity, selected for Vpu's enhanced targeting of long tetherin during its adaptation to humans.
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