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Dive into the research topics where Alex Harwig is active.

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Featured researches published by Alex Harwig.


Journal of Virology | 2007

The TAR Hairpin of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Can Be Deleted When Not Required for Tat-Mediated Activation of Transcription

Atze T. Das; Alex Harwig; Martine M. Vrolijk; Ben Berkhout

ABSTRACT The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) RNA genome contains a terminal repeat (R) region that encodes the transacting responsive (TAR) hairpin, which is essential for Tat-mediated activation of gene expression. TAR has also been implicated in several other processes during viral replication, including translation, dimerization, packaging, and reverse transcription. However, most studies in which replication of TAR-mutated viruses was analyzed were complicated by the dominant negative effect of the mutations on transcription. We therefore used an HIV-1 variant that does not require TAR for transcription to reinvestigate the role of TAR in HIV-1 replication. We demonstrate that this virus can replicate efficiently upon complete deletion of TAR. Furthermore, evolution of a TAR-deleted variant in long-term cultures indicates that HIV-1 requires a stable stem-loop structure at the start of the viral transcripts in which the 5′-terminal nucleotides are base paired. This prerequisite for efficient replication can be fulfilled by the TAR hairpin but also by unrelated stem-loop structures. We therefore conclude that TAR has no essential function in HIV-1 replication other than to accommodate Tat-mediated activation of transcription.


Journal of Virology | 2011

The HIV-1 Tat Protein Has a Versatile Role in Activating Viral Transcription

Atze T. Das; Alex Harwig; Ben Berkhout

ABSTRACT It is generally acknowledged that the Tat protein has a pivotal role in HIV-1 replication because it stimulates transcription from the viral long terminal repeat (LTR) promoter by binding to the TAR hairpin in the nascent RNA transcript. However, a multitude of additional Tat functions have been suggested. The importance of these functions is difficult to assess in replication studies with Tat-mutated HIV-1 variants because of the dominant negative effect on viral gene expression. We therefore used an HIV-1 construct that does not depend on the Tat-TAR interaction for transcription to reevaluate whether or not Tat has a second essential function in HIV-1 replication. This HIV-rtTA variant uses the incorporated Tet-On gene expression system for activation of transcription and replicates efficiently upon complete TAR deletion. Here we demonstrated that Tat inactivation does nevertheless severely inhibit replication. Upon long-term culturing, the Tat-minus HIV-rtTA variant acquired mutations in the U3 region that improved promoter activity and reestablished replication. We showed that in the absence of a functional TAR, Tat remains important for viral transcription via Sp1 sequence elements in the U3 promoter region. Substitution of these U3 sequences with nonrelated promoter elements created a virus that replicates efficiently without Tat in SupT1 T cells. These results indicate that Tat has a versatile role in transcription via TAR and U3 elements. The results also imply that Tat has no other essential function in viral replication in cultured T cells.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2008

Destabilization of the TAR hairpin affects the structure and function of the HIV-1 leader RNA

Martine M. Vrolijk; Marcel Ooms; Alex Harwig; Atze T. Das; Ben Berkhout

The TAR hairpin of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) RNA genome is essential for virus replication. TAR forms the binding site for the transcriptional trans-activator protein Tat and multiple additional TAR functions have been proposed. We previously constructed an HIV-1 variant in which the TAR-Tat transcription control mechanism is replaced by the components of the Tet-ON regulatory system. In this context, the surprising finding was that TAR can be truncated or even deleted, but partial TAR deletions that destabilize the stem structure cause a severe replication defect. In this study, we demonstrate that the HIV-1 RNA genome requires a stable hairpin at its 5′-end because unpaired TAR sequences affect the proper folding of the untranslated leader RNA. Consequently, multiple leader-encoded functions are affected by partial TAR deletions. Upon evolution of such mutant viruses, the replication capacity was repaired through the acquisition of additional TAR mutations that restore the local RNA folding, thus preventing the detrimental effect on the leader conformation.


Retrovirology | 2008

Optimization of the doxycycline-dependent simian immunodeficiency virus through in vitro evolution

Atze T. Das; Bep Klaver; Mireille Centlivre; Alex Harwig; Marcel Ooms; Mark Page; Neil Almond; Fang Yuan; Mike Piatak; Jeffrey D. Lifson; Ben Berkhout

BackgroundVaccination of macaques with live attenuated simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) provides significant protection against the wild-type virus. The use of a live attenuated human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) as AIDS vaccine in humans is however considered unsafe because of the risk that the attenuated virus may accumulate genetic changes during persistence and evolve to a pathogenic variant. We earlier presented a conditionally live HIV-1 variant that replicates exclusively in the presence of doxycycline (dox). Replication of this vaccine strain can be limited to the time that is needed to provide full protection through transient dox administration. Since the effectiveness and safety of such a conditionally live virus vaccine should be tested in macaques, we constructed a similar dox-dependent SIV variant. The Tat-TAR transcription control mechanism in this virus was inactivated through mutation and functionally replaced by the dox-inducible Tet-On regulatory system. This SIV-rtTA variant replicated in a dox-dependent manner in T cell lines, but not as efficiently as the parental SIVmac239 strain. Since macaque studies will likely require an efficiently replicating variant, we set out to optimize SIV-rtTA through in vitro viral evolution.ResultsUpon long-term culturing of SIV-rtTA, additional nucleotide substitutions were observed in TAR that affect the structure of this RNA element but that do not restore Tat binding. We demonstrate that the bulge and loop mutations that we had introduced in the TAR element of SIV-rtTA to inactivate the Tat-TAR mechanism, shifted the equilibrium between two alternative conformations of TAR. The additional TAR mutations observed in the evolved variants partially or completely restored this equilibrium, which suggests that the balance between the two TAR conformations is important for efficient viral replication. Moreover, SIV-rtTA acquired mutations in the U3 promoter region. We demonstrate that these TAR and U3 changes improve viral replication in T-cell lines and macaque peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) but do not affect dox-control.ConclusionThe dox-dependent SIV-rtTA variant was optimized by viral evolution, yielding variants that can be used to test the conditionally live virus vaccine approach and as a tool in SIV biology studies and vaccine research.


RNA | 2014

Probing the shRNA characteristics that hinder Dicer recognition and consequently allow Ago-mediated processing and AgoshRNA activity

Elena Herrera-Carrillo; Alex Harwig; Ying Poi Liu; Ben Berkhout

Recent evidence indicates the presence of alternative pathways for microRNA (miRNA) and short hairpin (shRNA) processing. Specifically, some of these molecules are refractory to Dicer-mediated processing, which allows alternative processing routes via the Ago2 endonuclease. The resulting RNA molecules differ in size and sequence and will thus trigger the silencing of different target RNAs. It is, therefore, important to understand these processing routes in mechanistic detail such that one can design exclusive RNA reagents for a specific processing route. The exact sh/miRNA properties that determine this routing toward Dicer or Ago2 are incompletely understood. The size of the base-paired stem seems an important determinant, but other RNA elements may contribute as well. In this study, we document the importance of a weak G-U or U-G base pair at the top of the hairpin stem.


Journal of Virology | 2007

Construction of a Doxycycline-Dependent Simian Immunodeficiency Virus Reveals a Nontranscriptional Function of Tat in Viral Replication

Atze T. Das; Bep Klaver; Alex Harwig; Monique Vink; Marcel Ooms; Mireille Centlivre; Ben Berkhout

ABSTRACT In the quest for an effective vaccine against human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), live attenuated virus vaccines have proven to be very effective in the experimental model system of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) in macaques. However, live attenuated HIV vaccines are considered unsafe for use in humans because the attenuated virus may accumulate genetic changes during persistence and evolve to a pathogenic variant. As an alternative approach, we earlier presented a conditionally live HIV-1 variant that replicates exclusively in the presence of doxycycline (DOX). Replication of this vaccine strain can be limited to the time that is needed to provide full protection through transient DOX administration. Since the effectiveness and safety of such a conditionally live AIDS vaccine should be tested in macaques, we constructed a similar DOX-dependent SIVmac239 variant in which the Tat-TAR (trans-acting responsive) transcription control mechanism was functionally replaced by the DOX-inducible Tet-On regulatory mechanism. Moreover, this virus can be used as a tool in SIV biology studies and vaccine research because both the level and duration of replication can be controlled by DOX administration. Unexpectedly, the new SIV variant required a wild-type Tat protein for replication, although gene expression was fully controlled by the incorporated Tet-On system. This result suggests that Tat has a second function in SIV replication in addition to its role in the activation of transcription.


Retrovirology | 2012

Opening of the TAR hairpin in the HIV-1 genome causes aberrant RNA dimerization and packaging

Atze T. Das; Martine M. Vrolijk; Alex Harwig; Ben Berkhout

BackgroundThe TAR hairpin is present at both the 5′ and 3′ end of the HIV-1 RNA genome. The 5′ element binds the viral Tat protein and is essential for Tat-mediated activation of transcription. We recently observed that complete TAR deletion is allowed in the context of an HIV-1 variant that does not depend on this Tat-TAR axis for transcription. Mutations that open the 5′ stem-loop structure did however affect the leader RNA conformation and resulted in a severe replication defect. In this study, we set out to analyze which step of the HIV-1 replication cycle is affected by this conformational change of the leader RNA.ResultsWe demonstrate that opening the 5′ TAR structure through a deletion in either side of the stem region caused aberrant dimerization and reduced packaging of the unspliced viral RNA genome. In contrast, truncation of the TAR hairpin through deletions in both sides of the stem did not affect RNA dimer formation and packaging.ConclusionsThese results demonstrate that, although the TAR hairpin is not essential for RNA dimerization and packaging, mutations in TAR can significantly affect these processes through misfolding of the relevant RNA signals.


Retrovirology | 2015

HIV-1 transcriptional silencing caused by TRIM22 inhibition of Sp1 binding to the viral promoter

Filippo Turrini; Sara S. Marelli; Anna Kajaste-Rudnitski; Marina Lusic; Carine Van Lint; Atze T. Das; Alex Harwig; Ben Berkhout; Elisa Vicenzi

BackgroundIntracellular defense proteins, also referred to as restriction factors, are capable of interfering with different steps of the viral life cycle. Among these, we have shown that Tripartite motif 22 (TRIM22) suppresses basal as well as phorbol ester-induced HIV-1 long terminal repeat (LTR)-mediated transcription, independently of its E3 ubiquitin ligase activity, nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells (NF-kB) binding to the U3 region and Tat interaction with the TAR region of the HIV-1 LTR. As basal HIV-1 transcription is driven by the transcription factor specificity protein 1 (Sp1), we have investigated whether TRIM22 could interfere with Sp1-driven transcriptional activation of the HIV-1 LTR.Findings293T cells, devoid of endogenous TRIM22 expression, were transfected with a TRIM22-expressing plasmid together with reporter plasmids driven by the HIV-1 LTR promoter either containing or lacking Sp1 binding sites or with reporter plasmids driven by non-viral promoter sequences either containing or lacking the three Sp1 binding sites from the HIV-1 LTR. These reporter assays showed that TRIM22 efficiently inhibited Sp1-driven transcription. Knocking down TRIM22 expression in the CD4+ SupT1 T cell line increased the replication of Sp1-dependent HIV-1 variants. TRIM22 did not interact with Sp1, but prevented binding of Sp1 to the HIV-1 promoter, as demonstrated in protein-DNA pull down and chromatin immunoprecipitation assays.ConclusionTRIM22 acts as a suppressor of basal HIV-1 LTR-driven transcription by preventing Sp1 binding to the HIV-1 promoter.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2016

Tat-dependent production of an HIV-1 TAR-encoded miRNA-like small RNA

Alex Harwig; Aldo Jongejan; Antoine H. C. van Kampen; Ben Berkhout; Atze T. Das

Evidence is accumulating that retroviruses can produce microRNAs (miRNAs). To prevent cleavage of their RNA genome, retroviruses have to use an alternative RNA source as miRNA precursor. The transacting responsive (TAR) hairpin structure in HIV-1 RNA has been suggested as source for miRNAs, but how these small RNAs are produced without impeding virus replication remained unclear. We used deep sequencing analysis of AGO2-bound HIV-1 RNAs to demonstrate that the 3′ side of the TAR hairpin is processed into a miRNA-like small RNA. This ∼21 nt RNA product is able to repress the expression of mRNAs bearing a complementary target sequence. Analysis of the small RNAs produced by wild-type and mutant HIV-1 variants revealed that non-processive transcription from the HIV-1 LTR promoter results in the production of short TAR RNAs that serve as precursor. These TAR RNAs are cleaved by Dicer and processing is stimulated by the viral Tat protein. This biogenesis pathway differs from the canonical miRNA pathway and allows HIV-1 to produce the TAR-encoded miRNA-like molecule without cleavage of the RNA genome.


RNA Biology | 2015

Mechanistic insights on the Dicer-independent AGO2-mediated processing of AgoshRNAs.

Ying Poi Liu; Margarete Karg; Alex Harwig; Elena Herrera-Carrillo; Aldo Jongejan; Antoine H. C. van Kampen; Ben Berkhout

Short hairpin RNAs (shRNAs) are widely used for gene knockdown by inducing the RNA interference (RNAi) mechanism, both for research and therapeutic purposes. The shRNA precursor is processed by the RNase III-like enzyme Dicer into biologically active small interfering RNA (siRNA). This effector molecule subsequently targets a complementary mRNA for destruction via the Argonaute 2 (AGO2) complex. The cellular role of Dicer concerns the processing of pre-miRNAs into mature microRNA (miRNA). Recently, a non-canonical pathway was reported for the biogenesis of miR-451, which bypasses Dicer and is processed instead by the slicer activity of AGO2, followed by the regular AGO2-mediated mRNA targeting step. Interestingly, shRNA designs that are characterized by a relatively short basepaired stem also bypass Dicer to be processed by AGO2. We named this design AgoshRNA as these molecules depend on AGO2 both for processing and silencing activity. In this study, we investigated diverse mechanistic aspects of this new class of AgoshRNA molecules. We probed the requirements for AGO2-mediated processing of AgoshRNAs by modification of the proposed cleavage site in the hairpin. We demonstrate by deep sequencing that AGO2-processed AgoshRNAs produce RNA effector molecules with more discrete ends than the products of the regular shRNA design. Furthermore, we tested whether trimming and tailing occurs upon AGO2-mediated processing of AgoshRNAs, similar to what has been described for miR-451. Finally, we tested the prediction that AgoshRNA activity, unlike that of regular shRNAs, is maintained in Dicer-deficient cell types. These mechanistic insights could aid in the design of optimised AgoshRNA tools and therapeutics.

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Ben Berkhout

University of Amsterdam

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Atze T. Das

University of Amsterdam

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Bep Klaver

University of Amsterdam

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Marcel Ooms

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Ying Poi Liu

University of Amsterdam

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