Characterization of recombinant HIV-1 Tat and its interaction with TAR RNA

Abstract
Recombinant HIV-1 Tat (Tat 1-86) has been purified from the cytoplasmic fraction of Escherichia coli without the use of protein denaturants or chaotropic agents. Chloroquine-mediated uptake of the purified protein into cells resulted in transactivation of the HIV LTR promoter. Tat retains 1.64 mol of Zn2+/mol of protein by atomic absorption spectroscopy. Circular dichroism measurements indicated that the structure of recombinant Tat contains 15-20% alpha-helix. Filter binding assays showed that Tat binds to a 63-nucleotide target TAR RNA with a dissociation constant (Kd) of 10 nM at 25 degrees C, 0.05 M ionic strength, pH 7.5, in a 1:1 Tat-TAR RNA stoichiometry. Nonelectrostatic interactions provide the principal source of free energy of association. While the pH optimum occurs over a wide H+ concentration, the salt dependence of Kd indicates formation of a single ion pair. UV-induced protein-RNA cross-linking produced a labeled Tat-TAR RNA adduct, indicating that direct contact occurred between the Tat protein and TAR RNA.