학술논문

Global post-translational modification profiling of HIV-1-infected cells reveals mechanisms of host cellular pathway remodeling
Document Type
article
Source
Cell Reports. 39(2)
Subject
HIV/AIDS
Infectious Diseases
Biotechnology
Genetics
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Infection
HIV Infections
HIV Seropositivity
HIV-1
Humans
Protein Processing
Post-Translational
Proteomics
Ubiquitination
CP: Microbiology
CP: Molecular biology
b56
histone h1
phosphorylation
pp2a
proteomics
systems biology
ubiquitination
vif
vpr
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Medical Physiology
Language
Abstract
Viruses must effectively remodel host cellular pathways to replicate and evade immune defenses, and they must do so with limited genomic coding capacity. Targeting post-translational modification (PTM) pathways provides a mechanism by which viruses can broadly and rapidly transform a hostile host environment into a hospitable one. We use mass spectrometry-based proteomics to quantify changes in protein abundance and two PTM types-phosphorylation and ubiquitination-in response to HIV-1 infection with viruses harboring targeted deletions of a subset of HIV-1 genes. PTM analysis reveals a requirement for Aurora kinase activity in HIV-1 infection and identified putative substrates of a phosphatase that is degraded during infection. Finally, we demonstrate that the HIV-1 Vpr protein inhibits histone H1 ubiquitination, leading to defects in DNA repair.