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The Journal of Biological Chemistry 283, 41 (2008) 27838-49
Insight into the integrase-DNA recognition mechanism. A specific DNA-binding mode revealed by an enzymatically labeled integrase.
Olivier Delelis 1, Kevin Carayon 1, Elvire Guiot 2, Hervé Leh 1, Patrick Tauc 1, Jean-Claude Brochon 1, Jean-François Mouscadet 3, Eric Deprez ( ) 1
(10/10/2008)

Integration catalyzed by integrase (IN) is a key process in the retrovirus life cycle. Many biochemical or structural human immunodeficiency virus, type 1 (HIV-1) IN studies have been severely impeded by its propensity to aggregate. We characterized a retroviral IN (primate foamy virus (PFV-1)) that displays a solubility profile different from that of HIV-1 IN. Using various techniques, including fluorescence correlation spectroscopy, time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy, and size exclusion chromatography, we identified a monomer-dimer equilibrium for the protein alone, with a half-transition concentration of 20-30 mum. We performed specific enzymatic labeling of PFV-1 IN and measured the fluorescence resonance energy transfer between carboxytetramethylrhodamine-labeled IN and fluorescein-labeled DNA substrates. FRET and fluorescence anisotropy highlight the preferential binding of PFV-1 IN to the 3'-end processing site. Sequence-specific DNA binding was not observed with HIV-1 IN, suggesting that the intrinsic ability of retroviral INs to bind preferentially to the processing site is highly underestimated in the presence of aggregates. IN is in a dimeric state for 3'-processing on short DNA substrates, whereas IN polymerization, mediated by nonspecific contacts at internal DNA positions, occurs on longer DNAs. Additionally, aggregation, mediated by nonspecific IN-IN interactions, occurs preferentially with short DNAs at high IN/DNA ratios. The presence of either higher order complex is detrimental for specific activity. Ionic strength favors catalytically competent over higher order complexes by selectively disrupting nonspecific IN-IN interactions. This counteracting effect was not observed with polymerization. The synergic effect on the selection of specific/competent complexes, obtained by using short DNA substrates under high salt conditions, may have important implications for further structural studies in IN.DNA complexes.
1 :  Laboratoire de Biotechnologie et Pharmacologie génétique Appliquée (LBPA)
CNRS : UMR8113 – École normale supérieure de Cachan - ENS Cachan
2 :  Neurobiologie des processus adaptatifs (NPA)
CNRS : UMR7102 – Université Pierre et Marie Curie [UPMC] - Paris VI
3 :  Ecole Normale Supérieure de Cachan (ENS Cachan)
École normale supérieure de Cachan - ENS Cachan
Sciences du Vivant/Biochimie, Biologie Moléculaire/Biophysique
IMMUNODEFICIENCY-VIRUS TYPE-1 – RESOLVED FLUORESCENCE ANISOTROPY – CARBOXYL-TERMINAL DOMAINS – MAXIMUM-ENTROPY METHOD – HIV-1 INTEGRASE – VIRAL-DNA – IN-VITRO – NUCLEOCAPSID PROTEIN – CATALYTIC CORE – REPLICATION