MUTATIONAL STUDIES OF HUMAN-IMMUNODEFICIENCY-VIRUS TYPE-1 REVERSE-TRANSCRIPTASE - THE INVOLVEMENT OF RESIDUE-183 AND RESIDUE-184 IN THE FIDELITY OF DNA-SYNTHESIS
M. Bakhanashvili et al., MUTATIONAL STUDIES OF HUMAN-IMMUNODEFICIENCY-VIRUS TYPE-1 REVERSE-TRANSCRIPTASE - THE INVOLVEMENT OF RESIDUE-183 AND RESIDUE-184 IN THE FIDELITY OF DNA-SYNTHESIS, FEBS letters, 391(3), 1996, pp. 257-262
The high error rates characteristic of human immunodeficiency virus ty
pe-1 reverse transcriptase (HIV-1 RT) are a presumptive source of the
viral hypermutability that impedes prevention and therapy of acquired
immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), We have analyzed two mutants of HIV-
1 RT by conducting a comparative study of the accuracy of DNA synthesi
s, Each mutant bears a single amino acid substitution adjacent to the
two aspartic acid residues at positions 185 and 186 in the highly cons
erved DNA polymerase active site, The first mutant, Met 184 --> Leu (M
184L), displays a marked reduction in both misinsertion and mispair ex
tension, suggesting a fidelity of DNA synthesis significantly higher t
han that of the wild-type HIV-1 RT, The second mutant, Tyr 183 --> Phe
(Y183F), shows a decrease in mispair extension with no significant ch
ange in misincorporation. Thus, the overall pattern of error-proneness
of DNA synthesis is: wild-type HIV-1 RT > Y183F > M184L, Taken togeth
er, it is possible that residues 183 and 184 contribute to the low fid
elity of DNA synthesis characteristic of the reverse transcriptases of
HIV-1, HIV-2 and possibly, of other lentiviruses, Our observations ma
y bear on the nature of potential mutations responsible for resistance
to the nucleoside analogs used in chemotherapy of AIDS.