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Letters to Nature
Nature 424, 99-103 (3 July 2003) | doi:10.1038/nature01709; Received 14 April 2003; Accepted 13 May 2003; Published online 28 May 2003
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Junior Research Groups (W1 / W2)
- Cluster of Excellence "Multimodal Computing and Interaction"
- Saarbruecken Germany
PhD - Helmholtz International Graduate School for Infection Research
- Helmholtz-Zentrum fur Infektionsforschung
- Braunschweig Germany
Broad antiretroviral defence by human APOBEC3G through lethal editing of nascent reverse transcripts
Bastien Mangeat1,2, Priscilla Turelli1,2, Gersende Caron3, Marc Friedli1,4, Luc Perrin3 & Didier Trono1,4
- Department of Genetics and Microbiology,
- Department of Medicine, and
- 'Frontiers in Genetics' Research Program, University of Geneva, 1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland
- These authors contributed equally to this work
Correspondence to: Didier Trono1,4 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to D.T. (Email: didier.trono@medecine.unige.ch).
Abstract
Viral replication usually requires that innate intracellular lines of defence be overcome, a task usually accomplished by specialized viral gene products. The virion infectivity factor (Vif) protein of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is required during the late stages of viral production to counter the antiviral activity of APOBEC3G (apolipoprotein B mRNA-editing enzyme, catalytic polypeptide-like 3G; also known as CEM15), a protein expressed notably in human T lymphocytes1, 2, 3, 4. When produced in the presence of APOBEC3G, vif-defective virus is non-infectious. APOBEC3G is closely related to APOBEC1, the central component of an RNA-editing complex that deaminates a cytosine residue in apoB messenger RNA5, 6, 7. APOBEC family members also have potent DNA mutator activity through dC deamination8; however, whether the editing potential of APOBEC3G has any relevance to HIV inhibition is unknown. Here, we demonstrate that it does, as APOBEC3G exerts its antiviral effect during reverse transcription to trigger G-to-A hypermutation in the nascent retroviral DNA. We also find that APOBEC3G can act on a broad range of retroviruses in addition to HIV, suggesting that hypermutation by editing is a general innate defence mechanism against this important group of pathogens.
- Department of Genetics and Microbiology,
- Department of Medicine, and
- 'Frontiers in Genetics' Research Program, University of Geneva, 1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland
- These authors contributed equally to this work
Correspondence to: Didier Trono1,4 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to D.T. (Email: didier.trono@medecine.unige.ch).
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