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Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS logoLink to Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS
. 2008 Feb 12;65(9):1403–1424. doi: 10.1007/s00018-008-7540-5

Integrase, LEDGF/p75 and HIV replication

E M Poeschla 1,
PMCID: PMC3902792  NIHMSID: NIHMS546875  PMID: 18264802

Abstract.

HIV integrates a DNA copy of its genome into a host cell chromosome in each replication cycle. The essential DNA cleaving and joining chemistry of integration is known, but there is less understanding of the process as it occurs in a cell, where two complex and dynamic macromolecular entities are joined: the viral pre-integration complex and chromatin. Among implicated cellular factors, much recent attention has coalesced around LEDGF/p75, a nuclear protein that may act as a chromatin docking factor or receptor for lentiviral pre-integration complexes. LEDGF/p75 tethers HIV integrase to chromatin, protects it from degradation, and strongly influences the genome-wide pattern of HIV integration. Depleting the protein from cells and/or over-expressing its integrase-binding domain blocks viral replication. Current goals are to establish the underlying mechanisms and to determine whether this knowledge can be exploited for antiviral therapy or for targeting lentiviral vector integration in human gene therapy.

Keywords. Integrase, integration, LEDGF/p75, HIV, lentivirus, chromatin, PWWP domain, AT Hook, HRP-2

Footnotes

Received 25 November 2007; received after revision 7 January 2008; accepted 10 January 2008


Articles from Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS are provided here courtesy of Springer

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