Monoubiquitinated histone H1B is required for antiviral protection in CD4+T cells resistant to HIV-1

Adam Lesner, Alex Kartvelishvili, Jakob Lesniak, Dimitar Nikolov, Magdalena Kartvelishvili, Gusta Trillo-Pazos, Ewa Zablotna, Malgorzata Simm

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20 Scopus citations

Abstract

Linker histone H1B (H1B) coeluted with an antiviral activity during the purification of HIV-1 resistance factor (HRF) from supernatants of HRF(+) cells. Western blot analysis of the supernatant using α-H1 and α-ubiquitin antibodies detected the same band of roughly 46 kDa; this band was absent from the control supernatant. Depletion of histone from biologically active material did not affect its potential, suggesting that ubiquitinated H1B is not required for the HRF-mediated antiviral protection in HIV-1 susceptible target cells; however, specific silencing of histone H1B via RNAi in HRF(+) cells reduced the biological activity of cell culture supernatants by 96% and reversed the HIV-1 resistance phenotype of HRF(+) cells. Exposure to HRF induced ubiquitination and secretion of H1B from target HIV-1 susceptible cells, suggesting that ubiquitinated H1B is a cofactor of HRF, possibly regulating its expression and secretion from CD4+T cells induced to resist HIV-1 infection.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)16203-16211
Number of pages9
JournalBiochemistry
Volume43
Issue number51
DOIs
StatePublished - 28 Dec 2004
Externally publishedYes

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