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Global analysis of host-pathogen interactions
that regulate early-stage HIV-1 replication
König R, Zhou Y, Elleder D, Diamond TL, Bonamy GM, Irelan JT, Chiang
CY, Tu BP, De Jesus PD, Lilley CE, Seidel S, Opaluch AM, Caldwell JS, Weitzman
MD, Kuhen KL, Bandyopadhyay S, Ideker T, Orth AP, Miraglia LJ, Bushman FD,
Young JA, Chanda SK. (2008) Cell 135:49-60.
Human Immunodeficiency Viruses (HIV-1 and HIV-2) rely upon host-encoded proteins
to facilitate their replication. Here, we combined genome-wide siRNA analyses
with interrogation of human interactome databases to assemble a host-pathogen
biochemical network containing 213 confirmed host cellular factors and 11
HIV-1-encoded proteins. Protein complexes that regulate ubiquitin conjugation,
proteolysis, DNA-damage response, and RNA splicing were identified as important
modulators of early-stage HIV-1 infection. Additionally, over 40 new factors
were shown to specifically influence the initiation and/or kinetics of HIV-1
DNA synthesis, including cytoskeletal regulatory proteins, modulators of
posttranslational modification, and nucleic acid-binding proteins. Finally,
15 proteins with diverse functional roles, including nuclear transport, prostaglandin
synthesis, ubiquitination, and transcription, were found to influence nuclear
import or viral DNA integration. Taken together, the multiscale approach
described here has uncovered multiprotein virus-host interactions that likely
act in concert to facilitate the early steps of HIV-1 infection.
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