The Dual-Specificity Kinase DYRK1A Modulates the Levels of Cyclin L2 To Control HIV Replication in Macropha
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Journal of Virology
Abstract
HIV replication in macrophages contributes to the latent viral reservoirs,
which are considered the main barrier to HIV eradication. Few cellular factors that
facilitate HIV replication in latently infected cells are known. We previously identified
cyclin L2 as a critical factor required by HIV-1 and found that depletion of cyclin L2
attenuates HIV-1 replication in macrophages. Here we demonstrate that cyclin L2
promotes HIV-1 replication through interactions with the dual-specificity tyrosine
phosphorylation-regulated kinase 1A (DYRK1A). Cyclin L2 and DYRK1A were colocalized
in the nucleus and were found together in immunoprecipitation experiments.
Knockdown or inhibition of DYRK1A increased HIV-1 replication in macrophages,
while depletion of cyclin L2 decreased HIV-1 replication. Furthermore, depletion of
DYRK1A increased expression levels of cyclin L2. DYRK1A is a proline-directed kinase
that phosphorylates cyclin L2 at serine residues. Mutations of cyclin L2 at serine residues
preceding proline significantly stabilized cyclin L2 and increased HIV-1 replication
in macrophages. Thus, we propose that DYRK1A controls cyclin L2 expression,
leading to restriction of HIV replication in macrophages.
IMPORTANCE HIV continues to be a major public health problem worldwide, with
over 36 million people living with the virus. Although antiretroviral therapy (ART)
can control the virus, it does not provide cure. The virus hides in the genomes of
long-lived cells, such as resting CD4 T cells and differentiated macrophages. To get
a cure for HIV, it is important to identify and characterize the cellular factors that
control HIV multiplication in these reservoir cells. Previous work showed that cyclin
L2 is required for HIV replication in macrophages. However, how cyclin L2 is regulated
in macrophages is unknown. Here we show that the protein DYRK1A interacts
with and phosphorylates cyclin L2. Phosphorylation makes cyclin L2 amenable to
cellular degradation, leading to restriction of HIV replication in macrophages.
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Research Article
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Kisaka JK, Ratner L, Kyei GB. 2020. The dual-specificity kinase DYRK1A modulates the levels of cyclin L2 to control HIV replication in macrophages. J Virol 94:e01583-19. https://doi .org/10.1128/JVI.01583-19.