Journal article

Role of capsid sequence and immature nucleocapsid proteins p9 and p15 in Human Immunodeficiency Virus type 1 genomic RNA dimerization

J Kafaie, M Dolatshahi, L Ajamian, R Song, AJ Mouland, I Rouiller, M Laughrea

Virology | ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE | Published : 2009

Abstract

HIV-1 genomic RNA (gRNA) dimerization is important for viral infectivity and is regulated by proteolytic processing of the Gag precursor protein (Pr55gag) under the direction of the viral protease. The processing occurs in successive steps and, to date, the step associated with formation of a wild-type (WT) level of gRNA dimers has not been identified. The primary cleavage divides Pr55gag into two proteins. The C-terminal polypeptide is termed NCp15 (NCp7-p1-p6) because it contains the nucleocapsid protein (NC), a key determinant of gRNA dimerization and packaging. To examine the importance of precursor polypeptides NCp15 and NCp9 (NCp7-p1), we introduced mutations that prevented the proteol..

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University of Melbourne Researchers