Mutation-driven RRE stem-loop II conformational change induces HIV-1 nuclear export dysfunction.
Ojha, M., Hudson, L., Photenhauer, A., Zang, T., Lerew, L., Ekesan, S., Daniels, J., Nguyen, M., Paudyal, H., York, D.M., Ohi, M.D., Marchant, J., Bieniasz, P.D., Koirala, D.(2025) Nucleic Acids Res 53
- PubMed: 40613716 Search on PubMedSearch on PubMed Central
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkaf583
- Primary Citation Related Structures: 
9C2K, 9C75, 9E7D, 9E7E, 9E7G - PubMed Abstract: 
The Rev response element (RRE) forms an oligomeric complex with the viral protein Rev to facilitate the nuclear export of intron-retaining viral RNAs during the late phase of HIV-1 (human immunodeficiency virus type 1) infection. However, the structures and mechanisms underlying this process remain largely unknown. Here, we determined the crystal structure of the HIV-1 RRE stem-loop II (SLII), revealing a unique three-way junction architecture in which the base stem (IIa) bifurcates into the stem-loops (IIb and IIc) to compose Rev binding sites. The crystal structures of various SLII mutants demonstrated that while some mutants retain the same "compact" fold as the wild type, other single-nucleotide mutants induce drastic conformational changes, forming an "extended" SLII structure. Through in vitro Rev binding assays and Rev activity measurements in HIV-1-infected cells using structure-guided SLII mutants designed to favor specific conformers, we showed that while the compact fold represents a functional SLII, the alternative extended conformation inhibits Rev binding and oligomerization and consequently stimulates HIV-1 RNA nuclear export dysfunction. The propensity of SLII to adopt multiple conformations as captured in crystal structures and their influence on Rev oligomerization illuminate emerging perspectives on RRE structural plasticity-based regulation of HIV-1 nuclear export and provide opportunities for developing anti-HIV drugs targeting specific RRE conformations.
- Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Baltimore, MD 21250, United States.
Organizational Affiliation: 


















