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Molly Ohainle

Molly Ohainle

Verified

University of California, Berkeley · Center for Computational Biology

Active 2006–2024

h-index11
Citations1.4k
Papers3418 last 5y
Funding$4.2M1 active
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Research topics

  • Biology
  • Virology
  • Genetics
  • Computational biology
  • Cell biology

Selected publications

  • Capsid-dependent lentiviral restrictions

    Journal of Virology · 2024-03-18

    articleOpen accessSenior author

    ABSTRACT Host antiviral proteins inhibit primate lentiviruses and other retroviruses by targeting many features of the viral life cycle. The lentiviral capsid protein and the assembled viral core are known to be inhibited through multiple, directly acting antiviral proteins. Several phenotypes, including those known as Lv1 through Lv5 , have been described as cell type-specific blocks to infection against some but not all primate lentiviruses. Here we review important features of known capsid-targeting blocks to infection together with several blocks to infection for which the genes responsible for the inhibition still remain to be identified. We outline the features of these blocks as well as how current methodologies are now well suited to find these antiviral genes and solve these long-standing mysteries in the HIV and retrovirology fields.

  • A modular CRISPR screen identifies individual and combination pathways contributing to HIV-1 latency

    PLoS Pathogens · 2023-01-27 · 28 citations

    articleOpen accessCorresponding

    Transcriptional silencing of latent HIV-1 proviruses entails complex and overlapping mechanisms that pose a major barrier to in vivo elimination of HIV-1. We developed a new latency CRISPR screening strategy, called Latency HIV-CRISPR which uses the packaging of guideRNA-encoding lentiviral vector genomes into the supernatant of budding virions as a direct readout of factors involved in the maintenance of HIV-1 latency. We developed a custom guideRNA library targeting epigenetic regulatory genes and paired the screen with and without a latency reversal agent-AZD5582, an activator of the non-canonical NFκB pathway-to examine a combination of mechanisms controlling HIV-1 latency. A component of the Nucleosome Acetyltransferase of H4 histone acetylation (NuA4 HAT) complex, ING3, acts in concert with AZD5582 to activate proviruses in J-Lat cell lines and in a primary CD4+ T cell model of HIV-1 latency. We found that the knockout of ING3 reduces acetylation of the H4 histone tail and BRD4 occupancy on the HIV-1 LTR. However, the combination of ING3 knockout accompanied with the activation of the non-canonical NFκB pathway via AZD5582 resulted in a dramatic increase in initiation and elongation of RNA Polymerase II on the HIV-1 provirus in a manner that is nearly unique among all cellular promoters.

  • Correction Notice: HIV-CRISPR: A CRISPR/Cas9 Screening Method to Identify Genes Affecting HIV Replication

    BIO-PROTOCOL · 2023-01-01

    articleOpen accessSenior author
  • Patterns of evolution of TRIM genes highlight the evolutionary plasticity of antiviral effectors in mammals

    bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) · 2023-05-04

    preprintOpen access

    Abstract The innate immune system of mammals is formed by a complex web of interacting proteins, which together constitute the first barrier of entry for infectious pathogens. Genes from the E3-ubiquitin ligase tripartite motif (TRIM) family have been shown to play an important role in the innate immune system by restricting the activity of different retrovirus species. For example, TRIM5 and TRIM22, have both been associated with HIV restriction, and are regarded as crucial parts of the antiretroviral machinery of mammals. Our analyses of positive selection corroborate the great significance of these genes for some groups of mammals. However, we also show that many organisms lack TRIM5 and TRIM22 altogether. By analyzing a large number of mammalian genomes, here we provide the first comprehensive view of the evolution of these genes in eutherians, showcasing that the pattern of accumulation of TRIM genes has been dissimilar across mammalian orders. Our data suggests that these differences are caused by evolutionary plasticity of the immune system of eutherians, which have adapted to use different strategies to combat retrovirus infections. Altogether, our results provide insights into the dissimilar evolution of a representative family of restriction factors, highlighting a great example of adaptive and idiosyncratic evolution in the innate immune system.

  • Primate TRIM34 is a broadly-acting, TRIM5-dependent lentiviral restriction factor

    bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) · 2023-03-25 · 1 citations

    preprintOpen accessSenior authorCorresponding

    Abstract Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and other lentiviruses adapt to new hosts by evolving to evade host-specific innate immune proteins that differ in sequence and often viral recognition between host species. Understanding how these host antiviral proteins, called restriction factors, constrain lentivirus replication and transmission is key to understanding the emergence of pandemic viruses like HIV-1. Human TRIM34, a paralogue of the well-characterized lentiviral restriction factor TRIM5α, was previously identified by our lab via CRISPR-Cas9 screening as a restriction factor of certain HIV and SIV capsids. Here, we show that diverse primate TRIM34 orthologues from non-human primates can restrict a range of Simian Immunodeficiency Virus (SIV) capsids including SIV AGM-SAB , SIV AGM-TAN and SIV MAC capsids, which infect sabaeus monkeys, tantalus monkeys, and rhesus macaques, respectively. All primate TRIM34 orthologues tested, regardless of species of origin, were able to restrict this same subset of viral capsids. However, in all cases, this restriction also required the presence of TRIM5α. We demonstrate that TRIM5α is necessary, but not sufficient, for restriction of these capsids, and that human TRIM5α functionally interacts with TRIM34 from different species. Finally, we find that both the TRIM5α SPRY v1 loop and the TRIM34 SPRY domain are essential for TRIM34-mediated restriction. These data support a model in which TRIM34 is a broadly-conserved primate lentiviral restriction factor that acts in tandem with TRIM5α, such that together, these proteins can restrict capsids that neither can restrict alone.

  • Patterns of Evolution of TRIM Genes Highlight the Evolutionary Plasticity of Antiviral Effectors in Mammals

    Genome Biology and Evolution · 2023-11-20 · 10 citations

    articleOpen access

    The innate immune system of mammals is formed by a complex web of interacting proteins, which together constitute the first barrier of entry for infectious pathogens. Genes from the E3-ubiquitin ligase tripartite motif (TRIM) family have been shown to play an important role in the innate immune system by restricting the activity of different retrovirus species. For example, TRIM5 and TRIM22 have both been associated with HIV restriction and are regarded as crucial parts of the antiretroviral machinery of mammals. Our analyses of positive selection corroborate the great significance of these genes for some groups of mammals. However, we also show that many species lack TRIM5 and TRIM22 altogether. By analyzing a large number of mammalian genomes, here we provide the first comprehensive view of the evolution of these genes in eutherians, showcasing that the pattern of accumulation of TRIM genes has been dissimilar across mammalian orders. Our data suggest that these differences are caused by the evolutionary plasticity of the immune system of eutherians, which have adapted to use different strategies to combat retrovirus infections. Altogether, our results provide insights into the dissimilar evolution of a representative family of restriction factors, highlighting an example of adaptive and idiosyncratic evolution in the innate immune system.

  • A Virus-Packageable CRISPR System Identifies Host Dependency Factors Co-Opted by Multiple HIV-1 Strains

    mBio · 2023-02-06 · 12 citations

    articleOpen access

    With a small genome of ~9.2 kb that encodes 14 major proteins, HIV must hijack host cellular machinery to successfully establish infection. These host proteins necessary for HIV replication are called "dependency factors." Whole-genome, and then targeted screens were done to try to comprehensively identify all dependency factors acting throughout the HIV replication cycle. Many host processes were identified and validated as critical for HIV replication across multiple HIV strains.

  • Primate TRIM34 is a broadly-acting, TRIM5-dependent lentiviral restriction factor

    Retrovirology · 2023-08-22 · 7 citations

    articleOpen accessSenior author

    Abstract Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and other lentiviruses adapt to new hosts by evolving to evade host-specific innate immune proteins that differ in sequence and often viral recognition between host species. Understanding how these host antiviral proteins, called restriction factors, constrain lentivirus replication and transmission is key to understanding the emergence of pandemic viruses like HIV-1. Human TRIM34, a paralogue of the well-characterized lentiviral restriction factor TRIM5α, was previously identified by our lab via CRISPR-Cas9 screening as a restriction factor of certain HIV and SIV capsids. Here, we show that diverse primate TRIM34 orthologues from non-human primates can restrict a range of Simian Immunodeficiency Virus (SIV) capsids including SIV AGM−SAB , SIV AGM−TAN and SIV MAC capsids, which infect sabaeus monkeys, tantalus monkeys, and rhesus macaques, respectively. All primate TRIM34 orthologues tested, regardless of species of origin, were able to restrict this same subset of viral capsids. However, in all cases, this restriction also required the presence of TRIM5α. We demonstrate that TRIM5α is necessary, but not sufficient, for restriction of these capsids, and that human TRIM5α functionally interacts with TRIM34 from different species. Finally, we find that both the TRIM5α SPRY v1 loop and the TRIM34 SPRY domain are essential for TRIM34-mediated restriction. These data support a model in which TRIM34 is a broadly-conserved primate lentiviral restriction factor that acts in tandem with TRIM5α, such that together, these proteins can restrict capsids that neither can restrict alone.

  • Additional file 2 of Primate TRIM34 is a broadly-acting, TRIM5-dependent lentiviral restriction factor

    Open MIND · 2023-01-01

    datasetSenior author

    Additional file 2. Sequences used in this study.

  • A Virus-Packageable CRISPR System Identifies Host Dependency Factors Across Multiple HIV-1 Strains

    bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) · 2022-11-04 · 1 citations

    preprintOpen access

    Abstract At each stage of the HIV life cycle, host cellular proteins are hijacked by the virus to establish and enhance infection. We adapted the virus packageable HIV-CRISPR screening technology at a genome-wide scale to comprehensively identify host factors that affect HIV replication in a human T cell line. Using a smaller, targeted HIV Dependency Factor (HIVDEP) sub-library, we then performed screens across multiple HIV strains representing different clades and with different biological properties to define which T cell host factors are strain-specific versus which ones are important across all HIV strains and different clades. Nearly 90% genes selected across multiple host pathways validated in subsequent assays as bona fide host dependency factors including numerous proteins not previously reported to play role in HIV biology such as UBE2M, MBNL1, FBXW7, PELP1, SLC39A7, and others. Our ranked list of screen hits across multiple viral strains form a resource of HIV dependency factors for future investigation of host proteins involved in HIV biology.

Recent grants

Frequent coauthors

  • Michael Emerman

    Fred Hutch Cancer Center

    35 shared
  • Ferdinand Roesch

    Centre Val de Loire

    22 shared
  • Joy Twentyman

    Fred Hutch Cancer Center

    15 shared
  • Abby Felton

    Fred Hutch Cancer Center

    14 shared
  • Julie Overbaugh

    Fred Hutch Cancer Center

    11 shared
  • Daryl Humes

    Sana Biotechnology (United States)

    10 shared
  • Jolien Vermiere

    Cape Town HVTN Immunology Laboratory / Hutchinson Centre Research Institute of South Africa

    9 shared
  • Louisa Pendergast

    Cape Town HVTN Immunology Laboratory / Hutchinson Centre Research Institute of South Africa

    9 shared

Labs

  • Center for Computational BiologyPI

Education

  • Postdoctoral Fellow

    UC Berkeley

    2011
  • Ph.D., Molecular and Cellular Biology

    University of Washington

    2007
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