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HIV Replication Rachel Carriger Biochemistry Fall 2004.

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Presentation on theme: "HIV Replication Rachel Carriger Biochemistry Fall 2004."— Presentation transcript:

1 HIV Replication Rachel Carriger Biochemistry Fall 2004

2 AIDS Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome First cases reported to CDC in 1981 HIV-1 and HIV-2 viruses discovered in 1983 by Luc Montagnier HIV is classified as a retrovirus

3 HIV is a Retrovirus Retrovirus Characteristics Complex interactions with the host cell Chronic course of disease Long and variable incubation periods Persistant viral replication Destruction of immunological cells HIV Characteristics Chronic course of disease 5-10 year latency period CD4 + T lymphocytes are the host cells Replicates rapidly Neurological abnormalities

4 HIV structure 72 glycoprotein complexes on lipid membrane Gp120 and gp41 transmembrane protein Inside p17 matrix and p24 core antigen protein Two copies of RNA Reverse transcriptase enzyme Nucleoprotein p7

5 HIV Entry Into CD4 + Host Cell Gp 120 molecule attaches to CD4 glycoprotein site and chemokine receptor GP 41 inserts its NH 2 head into the membrane of the host cell

6 Reverse Transcriptase Discovered by David Baltimore and Howard Temin in 1970 Purpose: to convert single stranded RNA into double stranded DNA Heterodimer of p51 and p66 subunits p66 subunit consists of five subdomains: fingers, thumb, palm, connector, and RNase H

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8 Replication tRNA primer bound to 3’ terminal end Binds free nucleotides at a rate of 20 per second in the 5’  3’ DNA/RNA hybrid formed Ribonuclease H subdomain of reverse transcriptase digests the original strand of RNA and leaves a string of purines to be used as primer for the new DNA strand

9 Reverse Transcriptase Conformational Changes 1.Fingers close down on the palm and hold the template strand in place 2.Fingers bend back releasing a pyrophosphate and base 3.Enzyme positioned at the 3’ end of the growing DNA chain so the replication process can continue

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11 Transcription DNA  RNA HIV incorporates itself into genome of the host cell Transcription factor NF-kB binds to LTR regions of DNA Regulatory proteins rev and tat produced first New RNA strand exits cell by budding

12 Gene Sequence of HIV Gag- group antigen, nucleus Pol- polymerase, enzyme Env- envelope, outer membrane

13 Difficult To Find A Cure Reverse transcriptase has a high mutation rate –Very tolerant of non standard base pairs –No exonuclease activity to proofread –1-10 errors per genome per replication cycle meaning 10 9 new viruses a day Replicates very rapidly Long latency period Drugs targeted at reverse transcriptase and protease

14 Protease Inhibitors HIV protease (aspartic protease) cleaves polypeptides that the virus makes and needs for maturation Protease Inhibitors bind tightly to the HIV protease and keep it from functioning

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16 Nucleoside Inhibitors Analogs of common base pairs used during replication Slight modifications in structure stop the whole replication process

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18 Non-Nucleoside Inhibitors Binds to reverse transcriptase and alters it’s structure NevirapineDelavirdine


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