The ESCRT complexes drive membrane scission in HIV-1 release, autophagosome closure, MVB biogenesis, cytokinesis, and other cell processes. ESCRT-I is the most upstream complex and bridges the system to HIV-1 Gag in virus release. The crystal structure of the headpiece of human ESCRT-I comprising TSG101–VPS28–VPS37B–MVB12A was determined, revealing an ESCRT-I helical assembly with a 12 molecule repeat. Electron microscopy confirmed that ESCRT-I subcomplexes form helical filaments in solution. Mutation of VPS28 helical interface residues blocks filament formation in vitro and autophagosome closure and HIV-1 release in human cells. Coarse grained simulations of ESCRT assembly at HIV-1 budding sites suggest that formation of a 12-membered ring of ESCRT-I molecules is a geometry-dependent checkpoint during late stages of Gag assembly and HIV-1 budding, and templates ESCRT-III assembly for membrane scission. These data show that ESCRT-I is not merely a bridging adaptor, but has an essential scaffolding and mechanical role in its own right.
Systematic Evolution of Ligands by Exponential Enrichment (SELEX) is the iterative process by which nucleic acids that can bind with high affinity and specificity (termed aptamers) to specific protein targets are selected. Using a SELEX protocol adapted for Xeno-Nucleic Acid (XNA) as a suitable substrate for aptamer generation, 2′-fluoroarabinonucleic acid (FANA) was used to select several related aptamers to HIV-1 integrase (IN). IN bound FANA aptamers with equilibrium dissociation constants (K D,app ) of ∼50−100 pM in a buffer with 200 mM NaCl and 6 mM MgCl 2 . Comparisons to published HIV-1 IN RNA and DNA aptamers as well as IN genomic binding partners indicated that FANA aptamers bound more than 2 orders of magnitude more tightly to IN. Using a combination of RNA folding algorithms and covariation analysis, all strong binding aptamers demonstrated a common four-way junction structure, despite significant sequence variation. IN aptamers were selected from the same starting library as FA1, a FANA aptamer that binds with pM affinity to HIV-1 Reverse Transcriptase (RT). It contains a 20nucleotide 5′ DNA sequence followed by 59 FANA nucleotides. IN-1.1 (one of the selected aptamers) potently inhibited IN activity and intasome formation in vitro. Replacing the FANA nucleotides of IN-1.1 with 2′fluororibonucleic acid (F-RNA), which has the same chemical formula but with a ribose rather than arabinose sugar conformation, dramatically reduced binding, suggesting that FANA adopts unique structural conformations that promote binding to HIV-1 IN.
The endosomal sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT) machinery is centrally involved in the repair of damage to both the plasma and lysosome membranes. ESCRT recruitment to sites of damage occurs on a fast time scale, and Ca 2+ has been proposed to play a key signaling role in the process. Here, we show that the Ca 2+ -binding regulatory protein ALG-2 binds directly to negatively charged membranes in a Ca 2+ -dependent manner. Next, by monitoring the colocalization of ALIX with ALG-2 on negatively charged membranes, we show that ALG-2 recruits ALIX to the membrane. Furthermore, we show that ALIX recruitment to the membrane orchestrates the downstream assembly of late-acting CHMP4B, CHMP3, and CHMP2A subunits along with the AAA + ATPase VPS4B. Finally, we show that ALG-2 can also recruit the ESCRT-III machinery to the membrane via the canonical ESCRT-I/II pathway. Our reconstitution experiments delineate the minimal sets of components needed to assemble the entire membrane repair machinery and open an avenue for the mechanistic understanding of endolysosomal membrane repair.
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