The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 5' packaging signal structure affects translation but does not function as an internal ribosome entry site structure.

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RESUMO

The role of the RNA secondary structure in the 5' packaging signal region of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) in initiating translation of gag mRNA has been investigated both in vitro and in the presence of cellular cofactors in vivo. Heat denaturation of the structure and mutagenic deletion both lead to an increase in levels of translated products, indicating that the structure is a significant inhibitor of translation. The proximity of the gag AUG to the packaging signal structure suggested that it might function as an internal ribosome entry site. However, in both a cell-free system and eukaryotic cells, translation will initiate at a novel upstream initiation codon introduced within the 5' noncoding region. This codon is utilized exclusively, resulting in gag protein products with an extra 11 amino acids at the amino terminus, which, when expressed in T lymphocytes, are confined intracellularly, probably because of the lack of an N-terminal glycine myristoylation signal. Deletion of the secondary structure abolishes gag production even in the presence of tat and rev in trans. Using dicistronic constructs containing the HIV-1 5' leader cloned between two heterologous open reading frames, we were unable to detect any significant expression of the second open reading frame that would have been supportive of an internal ribosome entry site mechanism. Using mutant proviruses either lacking the entire packaging signal structure region or containing the introduced upstream initiation codon in long-term replication studies, we were unable to detect reverse transcriptase activity in culture supernatants. The 5' packaging signal structure of HIV-1 does not serve as an internal ribosome entry site. The translation of gag is consistent with ribosomal scanning. However, the packaging signal structure causes significant translational inhibition.

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