HIV-1 enhances mTORC1 activity and repositions lysosomes to the periphery by co-opting Rag GTPases
Author
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Cinti, Alessandro
Author
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Le Sage, Valerie
Author
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Milev, Miroslav P.
Author
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Valiente Echeverría, Fernando Andrés
Author
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Crossie, Christina
Author
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Miron, Marie Joelle
Author
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Pante, Nelly
Author
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Olivier, Martin
Author
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Mouland, Andrew J.
Admission date
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2018-05-28T16:36:18Z
Available date
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2018-05-28T16:36:18Z
Publication date
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2017
Cita de ítem
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Scientific Reports 7: 5515
es_ES
Identifier
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10.1038/s41598-017-05410-0
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/148183
Abstract
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HIV-1 co-opts several host machinery to generate a permissive environment for viral replication and transmission. In this work we reveal how HIV-1 impacts the host translation and intracellular vesicular trafficking machineries for protein synthesis and to impede the physiological late endosome/lysosome (LEL) trafficking in stressful conditions. First, HIV-1 enhances the activity of the master regulator of protein synthesis, the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR). Second, the virus commandeers mTORassociated late endosome/lysosome (LEL) trafficking and counteracts metabolic and environmental stress-induced intracellular repositioning of LEL. We then show that the small Rag GTPases, RagA and RagB, are required for the HIV-1-mediated LEL repositioning that is likely mediated by interactions between the Rags and the viral proteins, Gag and Vif. siRNA-mediated depletion of RagA and RagB leads to a loss in mTOR association to LEL and to a blockade of viral particle assembly and release at the plasma membrane with a marked concomitant reduction in virus production. These results show that HIV-1 co-opts fundamental mechanisms that regulate LEL motility and positioning and support the notion that LEL positioning is critical for HIV-1 replication.
es_ES
Patrocinador
dc.description.sponsorship
Conicyt Chile through the Fondecyt Initiation Into Research Program, 11140502 /
Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), MOP-38111, MOP-56974 / CIHR, HIG-13305 /
Canadian Foundation for HIV-1/AIDS Research and International AIDS Society