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Reverse transcriptase - HIV’s Achilles heel

Posted by ajcann on May 9, 2008

Reverse transcription With two catalytic activities and many substrates, how does HIV’s reverse transcriptase enzyme know what to do to which substrate? Zooming in on the enzyme’s molecular interactions provides tantalizing clues.

Dynamic binding orientations direct activity of HIV reverse transcriptase. Nature 453, 184-189
The reverse transcriptase of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) catalyses a series of reactions to convert the single-stranded RNA genome of HIV into double-stranded DNA for host-cell integration. This task requires the reverse transcriptase to discriminate a variety of nucleic-acid substrates such that active sites of the enzyme are correctly positioned to support one of three catalytic functions: RNA-directed DNA synthesis, DNA-directed DNA synthesis and DNA-directed RNA hydrolysis. However, the mechanism by which substrates regulate reverse transcriptase activities remains unclear. Here we report distinct orientational dynamics of reverse transcriptase observed on different substrates with a single-molecule assay. The enzyme adopted opposite binding orientations on duplexes containing DNA or RNA primers, directing its DNA synthesis or RNA hydrolysis activity, respectively. On duplexes containing the unique polypurine RNA primers for plus-strand DNA synthesis, the enzyme can rapidly switch between the two orientations. The switching kinetics were regulated by cognate nucleotides and non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, a major class of anti-HIV drugs. These results indicate that the activities of reverse transcriptase are determined by its binding orientation on substrates.

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One Response to “Reverse transcriptase - HIV’s Achilles heel”

  1. grownANDsexy Says:

    I don’t quite understand what all this means, but i hope the end result is that there is a cure or at very least a vaccine.

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