1 research outputs found
A Dynamic G‑Quadruplex Region Regulates the HIV‑1 Long Terminal Repeat Promoter
G-Quadruplexes,
noncanonical nucleic acid structures, act as silencers
in the promoter regions of human genes; putative G-quadruplex forming
sequences are also present in promoters of other mammals, yeasts,
and prokaryotes. Here we show that also the HIV-1 LTR promoter exploits
G-quadruplex-mediated transcriptional regulation with striking similarities
to eukaryotic promoters and that treatment with a G-quadruplex ligand
inhibits HIV-1 infectivity. Computational analysis on 953 HIV-1 strains
substantiated a highly conserved G-rich sequence corresponding to
Sp1 and NF-ÎşB binding sites. Biophysical/biochemical analysis
proved that two mutually exclusive parallel-like intramolecular G-quadruplexes,
stabilized by small molecule ligands, primarily fold in this region.
Mutations disrupting G-quadruplex formation enhanced HIV promoter
activity in cells, whereas treatment with a G-quadruplex ligand impaired
promoter activity and displayed antiviral effects. These findings
disclose the possibility of inhibiting the HIV-1 LTR promoter by G-quadruplex-interacting
small molecules, providing a new pathway to development of anti-HIV-1
drugs with unprecedented mechanism of action