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The mutation of Transportin 3 gene that causes limb girdle muscular dystrophy 1F induces protection against HIV-1 infection

Rodriguez-Mora, Sara; De Witid, Flore; Garcia-Perez, Javier; Bermejo, Mercedes; Lopez-Huertas, Maria Rosa; Mateos, Elena; Marti, Pilar; Rocha, Susana; Vigon, Lorena; Christ, Frauke; Debyser, Zeger; Vilchez, Juan Jesus; Coiras, Mayte; Alcami, Jose

PLOS PATHOGENS
2019
VL / 15 - BP / - EP /
abstract
The causative mutation responsible for limb girdle muscular dystrophy 1F (LGMD1F) is one heterozygous single nucleotide deletion in the stop codon of the nuclear import factor Transportin 3 gene (TNPO3). This mutation causes a carboxy-terminal extension of 15 amino acids, producing a protein of unknown function (TNPO3_mut) that is co-expressed with wild-type TNPO3 (TNPO3_wt). TNPO3 has been involved in the nuclear transport of serine/arginine-rich proteins such as splicing factors and also in HIV-1 infection through interaction with the viral integrase and capsid. We analyzed the effect of TNPO3_mut on HIV-1 infection using PBMCs from patients with LGMD1F infected ex vivo. HIV-1 infection was drastically impaired in these cells and viral integration was reduced 16-fold. No significant effects on viral reverse transcription and episomal 2-LTR circles were observed suggesting that the integration of HIV-1 genome was restricted. This is the second genetic defect described after CCR5 Delta 32 that shows strong resistance against HIV-1 infection.

AccesS level

Green published, Gold, Green submitted

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