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Protein Domain : Retroviral Vif (Viral infectivity) protein

Primary Identifier  IPR000475 Type  Family
Short Name  Vif
description  The virion infectivity factor (vif) is an accessory protein, which is essential for HIV replication in host cells. Vif of Human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) affects the infectivity of virus particles []to T lymphocytes and macrophages (in some casesincreasing the infectivity of HIV-1 particles by 100- to 1000-fold), but has no direct effect on transcription, translation or virus release. Vif antibodies are found in the sera of patients at all levels of HIV-1 infection, indicating that vif is expressed in natural infections in vivo. Other lentiviruses, including Simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV-cpz), Visna/Maedi virus, and Feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV), have vif open reading frames, suggestingvif plays an essential role during natural infections [].The expression of vif in BHK-21 cells has been shown to be linked to amodification of the C terminus of gp41env, which modification is inhibited by trans-epoxysuccinyl-L-leucylamido-(4-guanidio)butane (E64), a specific inhibitor of cysteine proteases []. Coupled with sequence analysis and the effects of point mutations in vif, it has been suggested that vif could be a cysteine protease. Virions produced in the absence of Vif have abnormal core morphology and those produced in primary T cells carry immature core proteins and low levels of mature capsid [].In humans, HIV-1 Vif hijacks cellular E3 ligase components containing CUL5, RBX2, ELOB, ELOC and CBFbeta, to poly-ubiquitinate antiviral cellular factors, APOBEC3 proteins [, , ]. In sheep and goats, Caprine arthritis encephalitis virus (CAEV) Vif is responsible for degradation of oaA3Z2-Z3 [].

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