
pmid: 30266929
pmc: PMC6162285
Abstract Interferon induced transmembrane proteins (IFITMs) inhibit the cellular entry of a broad range of viruses, but it has been suspected that for HIV-1 IFITMs may also inhibit a post-integration replicative step. We show that IFITM expression reduces HIV-1 viral protein synthesis by preferentially excluding viral mRNA transcripts from translation and thereby restricts viral production. Codon-optimization of proviral DNA rescues viral translation, implying that IFITM-mediated restriction requires recognition of viral RNA elements. In addition, we find that expression of the viral accessory protein Nef can help overcome the IFITM-mediated inhibition of virus production. Our studies identify a novel role for IFITMs in inhibiting HIV replication at the level of translation, but show that the effects can be overcome by the lentiviral protein Nef.
Membrane Proteins, RNA-Binding Proteins, HIV Infections, Virus Replication, Antigens, Differentiation, Article, Viral Proteins, HEK293 Cells, Protein Biosynthesis, HIV-1, Humans
Membrane Proteins, RNA-Binding Proteins, HIV Infections, Virus Replication, Antigens, Differentiation, Article, Viral Proteins, HEK293 Cells, Protein Biosynthesis, HIV-1, Humans
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