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Article Dans Une Revue Nucleic Acids Research Année : 2008

The HIV-1 transcriptional activator Tat has potent nucleic acid chaperoning activities in vitro.

Résumé

The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) is a primate lentivirus that causes the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). In addition to the virion structural proteins and enzyme precursors, that are Gag, Env and Pol, HIV-1 encodes several regulatory proteins, notably a small nuclear transcriptional activator named Tat. The Tat protein is absolutely required for virus replication since it controls proviral DNA transcription to generate the full-length viral mRNA. Tat can also regulate mRNA capping and splicing and was recently found to interfere with the cellular mi- and siRNA machinery. Because of its extensive interplay with nucleic acids, and its basic and disordered nature we speculated that Tat had nucleic acid-chaperoning properties. This prompted us to examine in vitro the nucleic acid-chaperoning activities of Tat and Tat peptides made by chemical synthesis. Here we report that Tat has potent nucleic acid-chaperoning activities according to the standard DNA annealing, DNA and RNA strand exchange, RNA ribozyme cleavage and trans-splicing assays. The active Tat(44-61) peptide identified here corresponds to the smallest known sequence with DNA/RNA chaperoning properties.

Dates et versions

hal-00316094 , version 1 (02-09-2008)

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Citer

Monika Kuciak, Caroline Gabus, Roland Ivanyi-Nagy, Katharina Semrad, Roman Storchak, et al.. The HIV-1 transcriptional activator Tat has potent nucleic acid chaperoning activities in vitro.. Nucleic Acids Research, 2008, 36 (10), pp.3389-400. ⟨10.1093/nar/gkn177⟩. ⟨hal-00316094⟩

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