Molecular Bases of Disease
Structural Properties of HIV Integrase·Lens Epithelium-derived Growth Factor Oligomers*

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Integrase (IN) is the catalytic component of the preintegration complex, a large nucleoprotein assembly critical for the integration of the retroviral genome into a host chromosome. Although partial crystal structures of human immunodeficiency virus IN alone and its complex with the integrase binding domain of the host factor PSIP1/lens epithelium-derived growth factor (LEDGF)/p75 are available, many questions remain regarding the properties and structures of LEDGF-bound IN oligomers. Using analytical ultracentrifugation, multiangle light scattering, and small angle x-ray scattering, we have established the oligomeric state, stoichiometry, and molecular shapes of IN·LEDGF complexes in solution. Analyses of intact IN tetramers bound to two different LEDGF truncations allow for placement of the integrase binding domain by difference analysis. Modeling of the small angle x-ray scattering envelopes using existing structural data suggests domain arrangements in the IN oligomers that support and extend existing biochemical data for IN·LEDGF complexes and lend new insights into the quaternary structure of LEDGF-bound IN tetramers. These IN oligomers may be involved in stages of the viral life cycle other than integration, including assembly, budding, and early replication.

Growth Factors
Integrase
Protein Structure
Viral Protein
X-ray Scattering

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*

This work was supported, in whole or in part, by National Institutes of Health Grants AI52845 and AI082020. This work was also supported by the University of Pennsylvania Center for AIDS Research, the Penn Genome Frontiers Institute, and a grant from the Pennsylvania Department of Health.

The on-line version of this article (available at http://www.jbc.org) contains supplemental Figs. S1–S5 and Table S1.

1

Supported by a Swarthmore College Postdoctoral Teaching Fellowship and the amfAR Mathilde Krim Fellowship in Basic Biomedical Research 106994-43-RFNT.