iScience (Mar 2024)

PCID2 dysregulates transcription and viral RNA processing to promote HIV-1 latency

  • Raquel Crespo,
  • Enrico Ne,
  • Julian Reinders,
  • Jenny I.J. Meier,
  • Chengcheng Li,
  • Sanne Jansen,
  • Alicja Górska,
  • Selin Koçer,
  • Tsung Wai Kan,
  • Wouter Doff,
  • Dick Dekkers,
  • Jeroen Demmers,
  • Robert-Jan Palstra,
  • Shringar Rao,
  • Tokameh Mahmoudi

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 27, no. 3
p. 109152

Abstract

Read online

Summary: HIV-1 latency results from tightly regulated molecular processes that act at distinct steps of HIV-1 gene expression. Here, we characterize PCI domain-containing 2 (PCID2) protein, a subunit of the transcription and export complex 2 (TREX2) complex, to enforce transcriptional repression and post-transcriptional blocks to HIV-1 gene expression during latency. PCID2 bound the latent HIV-1 LTR (long terminal repeat) and repressed transcription initiation during latency. Depletion of PCID2 remodeled the chromatin landscape at the HIV-1 promoter and resulted in transcriptional activation and latency reversal. Immunoprecipitation coupled to mass spectrometry identified PCID2-interacting proteins to include negative viral RNA (vRNA) splicing regulators, and PCID2 depletion resulted in over-splicing of intron-containing vRNA in cell lines and primary cells obtained from PWH. MCM3AP and DSS1, two other RNA-binding TREX2 complex subunits, also inhibit transcription initiation and vRNA alternative splicing during latency. Thus, PCID2 is a novel HIV-1 latency-promoting factor, which in context of the TREX2 sub-complex PCID2-DSS1-MCM3AP blocks transcription and dysregulates vRNA processing.

Keywords