학술논문

ARIH2 Is a Vif-Dependent Regulator of CUL5-Mediated APOBEC3G Degradation in HIV Infection
Document Type
article
Source
Cell Host & Microbe. 26(1)
Subject
Medical Microbiology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Immunology
Sexually Transmitted Infections
Infectious Diseases
HIV/AIDS
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Infection
APOBEC-3G Deaminase
CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes
Cells
Cultured
Cullin Proteins
HIV Infections
Host-Pathogen Interactions
Humans
Immune Evasion
Models
Theoretical
Proteolysis
Proteome
Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases
Virus Replication
vif Gene Products
Human Immunodeficiency Virus
AP-MS
APOBEC3
ARIH2
CUL5
HIV
Vif
host-virus interactions
Microbiology
Biochemistry and cell biology
Medical microbiology
Language
Abstract
The Cullin-RING E3 ligase (CRL) family is commonly hijacked by pathogens to redirect the host ubiquitin proteasome machinery to specific targets. During HIV infection, CRL5 is hijacked by HIV Vif to target viral restriction factors of the APOBEC3 family for ubiquitination and degradation. Here, using a quantitative proteomics approach, we identify the E3 ligase ARIH2 as a regulator of CRL5-mediated APOBEC3 degradation. The CUL5Vif/CBFß complex recruits ARIH2 where it acts to transfer ubiquitin directly to the APOBEC3 targets. ARIH2 is essential for CRL5-dependent HIV infectivity in primary CD4+ T cells. Furthermore, we show that ARIH2 cooperates with CRL5 to prime other cellular substrates for polyubiquitination, suggesting this may represent a general mechanism beyond HIV infection and APOBEC3 degradation. Taken together, these data identify ARIH2 as a co-factor in the Vif-hijacked CRL5 complex that contributes to HIV infectivity and demonstrate the operation of the E1-E2-E3/E3-substrate ubiquitination mechanism in a viral infection context.