Mutations in the primer grip region of human immunodeficiency virus reverse transcriptase (HIV-RT) affect its replication fidelity. The primer grip region (residues 227-235) correctly positions the 3-ends of primers. Point mutations were created by alanine substitution at positions 224 -235. Error frequencies were measured by extension of a dG:dA primer-template mismatch. Mutants E224A, P225A, P226A, L228A, and E233A were approximately equal to the wild type in their ability to extend the mismatch. Mutants F227A, W229A, M230A, G231A, and Y232A extended 40, 66, 54, 72, and 76% less efficiently past a dG:dA mismatch compared with the wild type. We also examined the misinsertion rates of dG, dC, or dA across from a DNA template dA using RT mutants F227A and W229A. Mutant W229A exhibited high fidelity and did not produce a dG:dA or dC:dA mismatch. Interestingly, mutant F227A displayed high fidelity for dG:dA and dC:dA mismatches but low fidelity for dA:dA misinsertions. This indicates that F227A discriminates against particular base substitutions. However, a primer extension assay with three dNTPs showed that F227A generally displays higher fidelity than the wild type RT. Clearly, primer grip mutations can improve or worsen either the overall or base-specific fidelity of HIV-RT. We hypothesize that wild type RT has evolved to a fidelity that allows genetic variation without compromising yield of viable viruses.
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) reverse transcriptase (HIV-RT)1 is the enzyme that converts the RNA genome of the virus to a double-stranded DNA, which is ultimately integrated into the host chromosome (1). This enzyme is multifunctional, possessing RNA-and DNA-dependent DNA polymerase, RNase H, strand transfer, and strand displacement activities (2, 3). Studies in vivo and in vitro have addressed the role of RT in the variability of the genome (4 -14). RT contributes to the generation of sequence diversity, partly because it produces frequent replication errors. One reason for its low fidelity is that RT lacks a 3Ј to 5Ј exonuclease activity (15). DNA polymerases in other organisms generally have this activity, which removes incorrectly added nucleotides by recognizing the mismatched base with the template sequence. RT misincorporates nucleotides at an estimated frequency of 1 per 5000 polymerized and extends mismatched termini at varying efficiencies (4, 6, 11, 14 -20). Additionally, RT alters the sequence of viral progeny by participating in recombination between the two copies of the viral genome (13, 21-28). Polymerization errors and recombination produce a high frequency of frameshift, deletion, and deletion with insertion mutations observed both in vivo and in vitro (6,7,11,13,21,29). This proclivity for mutations by RT helps HIV to evade immune responses and drug treatment.HIV-1 RT is a heterodimer composed of p66 and p51 subunits. The p66 subunit contains both the polymerase and RNase H active sites. The p51 subunit is a proteolytic product of p66 lacking the 15-kDa carboxyl-terminal (RNase H) d...