Trkola : Retroviruses Flashcards

1
Q

What’s a retrovirus genome organisation like ?

A

LTRs + Gag Pol Env.
gag = structural proteins ( Matrix, Capsid and Nucleocapsid.)
pol : enzymes genes (RT, Integrase, Protease)
env: glycoproteins (Surface unit and Transmembrane unit).

Keep in mind this is general consensus. Many retroviruses have more complex genomes, encoding for accessory proteins.

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2
Q

What’s the genome type of retroviruses ?

A

Positive ssRNA (group 6 Baltimore). Fun thing: it keeps two copies of it in the capsid.

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3
Q

Which HIV accessory proteins have a replicative function ?

A

tat, rev, vpr.

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4
Q

Which HIV accessory proteins have an immune evasion function ?

A

vif, vpu and nef.

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5
Q

What’s the three essential tricks of HIV to code sooo many proteins with such a tiny weeny genome ?

A

Overlapping ORFs + alternative splicing + polyproteins.

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6
Q

Where does the RT happen ?

A

In the cytoplasm. Viral DNA is then translocated to be integrated into the genome before it gets transcribed spliced and all the other bs.

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7
Q

When is the HIV virion particularely vulnerable during its replication cycle ?

A

At the Reverse Transcription phase. The capsid that protects the genome has to partially disassemble for it to happen, which leaves HIV at the mercy of APOBEC for example and other host factors.

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8
Q

The HIV1 capsid has two functions, post entry. Which are these ?

A

It can create pores into it to let only nucleotides in and initiate the RT. As discussed, it also has an occlusion role to hid the genome from cytosolic sensors and nucleases. this is why some antiviral treatments target it.

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9
Q

Does the RT only have a polymerase function ?

A

Nope, it also has RNaseH capability to degrade RNA. This is essential degrade the RNA of the DNA/RNA hybrids and get dsDNA in the end.

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10
Q

What’s the primer used by HIV1 to initiate the RT ?

A

It uses a host tRNA lys, that is actually steals about 20 copies of for assembly to store in the capsid! This binds to the Primer Binding Site (PBS) to initiate RT.

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11
Q

What’s the three groups of HIV1 ?

A

M, O and N.

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12
Q

What’s the PIC ?

A

It’s the pre integration complex: a large complex carrying many signaling sequences to force entry into the nucleus.

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13
Q

What’s PIC composition and their roles ?

A

Matrix, VPR, and Integrases.
Additionally contains cellular proteins as well, p75 for example that is crucial for integration by promoting chromatin association.

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14
Q

The integrases also have a role outside of the nucleus. What is it ?

A

The sequences at the ends of the proviral DNA must be correct and reactive. Integrases binds them to keep them steady and bridge them within the PIC.

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15
Q

Is the integration random ?

A

Nope: retroviruses select regions with a high transcriptional activity

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16
Q

How is Tat essential ?

A

Tat is required for transcription activation by binding to the Transcription Response Element. It’s generated from first mRNA.

17
Q

How is Rev essential ?

A

It’s required for the generation of genomic (therefore unspliced) RNA. Basically binds to RRE of certain RNAs, preventing one splice site to be exploited.

18
Q

What’s the LTR structure and role ?

A

LTRs are made of U3, R and U5 regions. Transcription is initiated between U3 and R.

It also contains a few binding sites for cellular TFs within the U3 region.

19
Q

Is there HIV transcription in resting cells ?

A

Nope. Nucleosomes bind to LTRs and see that it’s not accessible - latency.

20
Q

What cells are used for a latent HIV1 reservoir ?

A

Resting CD4+ T cells.

21
Q

Why is latency such an annoyance ?

A

They’re essentially invincible and invisible to the IS and treatments - and resting T cells have a slow decay rate, which makes this reservoir infinite and makes curing HIV1 impossible at the moment.

22
Q

What is tat’s function?

A

The RNA pol II gets stalled very soon after initiation of transcription. Tat gets activated, binds to the TAR, and recruits elungation factors to un stall it. Activates transcription (very low levels before its expression, enhancer protein).

23
Q

Why is HIV transcription upregulated in activated cells?

A

Because activated cells recruit a few transcription factors such as NfKb in the nucleus, thus “waking” the virus, and producing tat that’ll trigger the rest.

24
Q

How’s HIV budding ?

A

Using the cellular export machinery.

25
Q

Give us an ISG capable of inhibiting HIV1 budding - and a countermeasure.

A

Tetherin ! Vpu counteracts it tho.

26
Q

HIV1 virions need to mature. When and how ?

A

Mature AFTER budding, in the assembled particle. Essentially the gagpol polyprotein isn’t cleaved yet, leaving the capsid like an IKEA wardrobe.

27
Q

Give us the three classes of antiretroviral drugs.

A

Protease and maturation inhibitors
RT inhibitors
Integrase inhibitors.

28
Q

What’s the viral set point and what influences it ?

A

It’s the steady set level at which viremia isn’t achieved. Host genetics and immunity, together with the strain and genetic diversity of HIV, influence it.

29
Q

HTLV regulates a particular cellular process: which and how ?

A

Regulates cell growth and transformation, with the Tax protein: basically disregulates various receptors and ligands that stimulate growth factor recruitement and activation of TFs. As a result, cells get immortalised, and leukemia develops.