The nuclear lamina is a protein meshwork lining the nucleoplasmic face of the inner nuclear membrane and represents an important determinant of interphase nuclear architecture. Its major components are the A- and B-type lamins. Whereas B-type lamins are found in all mammalian cells, A-type lamin expression is developmentally regulated. In the mouse, A-type lamins do not appear until midway through embryonic development, suggesting that these proteins may be involved in the regulation of terminal differentiation. Here we show that mice lacking A-type lamins develop to term with no overt abnormalities. However, their postnatal growth is severely retarded and is characterized by the appearance of muscular dystrophy. This phenotype is associated with ultrastructural perturbations to the nuclear envelope. These include the mislocalization of emerin, an inner nuclear membrane protein, defects in which are implicated in Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy (EDMD), one of the three major X-linked dystrophies. Mice lacking the A-type lamins exhibit tissue-specific alterations to their nuclear envelope integrity and emerin distribution. In skeletal and cardiac muscles, this is manifest as a dystrophic condition related to EDMD.
A critical early event in the HIV type 1 (HIV-1) particle assembly pathway is the targeting of the Gag protein to the site of virus assembly. In many cell types, assembly takes place predominantly at the plasma membrane. Cellular factors that regulate Gag targeting remain undefined. The phosphoinositide phosphatidylinositol (4,5) bisphosphate [PI(4,5)P 2] controls the plasma membrane localization of a number of cellular proteins. To explore the possibility that this lipid may be involved in Gag targeting and virus particle production, we overexpressed phosphoinositide 5-phosphatase IV, an enzyme that depletes cellular PI(4,5)P 2, or overexpressed a constitutively active form of Arf6 (Arf6͞Q67L), which induces the formation of PI(4,5)P 2 -enriched endosomal structures. Both approaches severely reduced virus production. Upon 5-phosphatase IV overexpression, Gag was no longer localized on the plasma membrane but instead was retargeted to late endosomes. Strikingly, in cells expressing Arf6͞Q67L, Gag was redirected to the PI(4,5)P 2-enriched vesicles and HIV-1 virions budded into these vesicles. These results demonstrate that PI(4,5)P 2 plays a key role in Gag targeting to the plasma membrane and thus serves as a cellular determinant of HIV-1 particle production.
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infects CD4؉ T lymphocytes and monocytes/macrophages, incorporating host proteins in the process of assembly and budding. Analysis of the host cell proteins incorporated into virions can provide insights into viral biology. We characterized proteins in highly purified HIV-1 virions produced from human monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM), within which virus buds predominantly into intracytoplasmic vesicles, in contrast to the plasmalemmal budding of HIV-1 typically seen with infected T cells. Liquid chromatography-linked tandem mass spectrometry of highly purified virions identified many cellular proteins, including 33 previously described proteins in HIV-1 preparations from other cell types. Proteins involved in many different cellular structures and functions were present, including those from the cytoskeleton, adhesion, signaling, intracellular trafficking, chaperone, metabolic, ubiquitin/proteasomal, and immune response systems. We also identified annexins, annexin-binding proteins, Rab proteins, and other proteins involved in membrane organization, vesicular trafficking, and late endosomal function, as well as apolipoprotein E, which participates in cholesterol transport, immunoregulation, and modulation of cell growth and differentiation. Several tetraspanins, markers of the late endosomal compartment, were also identified. MDM-derived HIV contained 26 of 37 proteins previously found in exosomes, consistent with the idea that HIV uses the late endosome/multivesicular body pathway during virion budding from macrophages.As an RNA virus with limited coding capacity, human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) subverts cellular pathways and processes to facilitate many aspects of its replication cycle. It is known that a variety of cellular factors are involved in HIV-1 assembly and budding (13,20,42,44). Typically, HIV-1 is observed by electron microscopy to assemble at and bud from the plasma membrane in T cells and the epithelial cell lines that serve as models for HIV-1 assembly studies (23). In contrast, in macrophages, one of the primary target cell populations in vivo, HIV-1 appears to assemble mostly at internal late endosomal and multivesicular body (MVB) membranes and then bud into these vesicular structures, observable in electron micrographs as internal virion-filled compartments (48,54,55,59). After budding into MVB, these virion-laden vesicles are presumably transported to the cell surface and virus is released from the cell by a normal exocytotic fusion of these structures with the plasma membrane, thereby releasing the contents of the MVB (54, 55).To date, the differences in viral and cellular protein interactions involved in assembly and budding at the plasma membrane versus the late endosomal assembly pathway remain unclear. Clues to the location and the mechanism by which HIV-1 buds can be provided by the cellular proteins that are incorporated into virions. In the case of macrophage-derived virus, the presence of HLA class II and other late endosoma...
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