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      An exonic splicing silencer downstream of the 3' splice site A2 is required for efficient human immunodeficiency virus type 1 replication.

      Journal of Biology
      Base Sequence, Cell Line, Exons, HIV-1, genetics, physiology, Humans, Molecular Sequence Data, RNA Splicing, Silencer Elements, Transcriptional, Virus Replication

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          Abstract

          Alternative splicing of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) genomic mRNA produces more than 40 unique viral mRNA species, of which more than half remain incompletely spliced within an HIV-1-infected cell. Regulation of splicing at HIV-1 3' splice sites (3'ss) requires suboptimal polypyrimidine tracts, and positive or negative regulation of splicing occurs through binding of cellular factors to cis-acting splicing regulatory elements. We have previously shown that splicing at HIV-1 3'ss A2, which produces vpr mRNA and promotes inclusion of HIV-1 exon 3, is repressed by the hnRNP A/B-dependent exonic splicing silencer ESSV. Here we show that ESSV activity downstream of 3'ss A2 is localized to a 16-nucleotide element within HIV-1 exon 3. HIV-1 replication was reduced by 95% when ESSV was inactivated by mutagenesis. Reduced replication was concomitant with increased inclusion of exon 3 within spliced viral mRNA and decreased accumulation of unspliced viral mRNA, resulting in decreased cell-associated p55 Gag. Prolonged culture of ESSV mutant viruses resulted in two independent second-site reversions disrupting the splice sites that define exon 3, 3'ss A2 and 5' splice site D3. Either of these changes restored both HIV-1 replication and regulated viral splicing. Therefore, inhibition of HIV-1 3'ss A2 splicing is necessary for HIV-1 replication.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          16051840
          1182660
          10.1128/JVI.79.16.10478-10486.2005

          Chemistry
          Base Sequence,Cell Line,Exons,HIV-1,genetics,physiology,Humans,Molecular Sequence Data,RNA Splicing,Silencer Elements, Transcriptional,Virus Replication

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