The removal of the second intron in the HIV-1 rev/tat pre-mRNAs,
which involves the joining of splice site SD4 to SA7, is inhibited
by hnRNP A1 by a mechanism that requires the intronic splicing
silencer (ISS) and the exon splicing silencer (ESS3). In this
study, we have determined the RNA secondary structure and the
hnRNP A1 binding sites within the 3′ splice site region
by phylogenetic comparison and chemical/enzymatic probing. A
biochemical characterization of the RNA/protein complexes
demonstrates that hnRNP A1 binds specifically to primarily three
sites, the ISS, a novel UAG motif in the exon splicing enhancer
(ESE) and the ESS3 element, which are all situated in
experimentally supported stem loop structures. A mutational
analysis of the ISS region revealed that the core hnRNP A1 binding
site directly overlaps with a major branchpoint used in splicing
to SA7, thereby providing a direct explanation for the inhibition
of U2 snRNP association with the pre-mRNA by hnRNP A1. Binding
of hnRNP A1 to the ISS core site is inhibited by RNA structure
but strongly stimulated by the exonic silencer, ESS3. Moreover,
the ISS also stimulate binding of hnRNP A1 to the exonic splicing
regulators ESS3 and the ESE. Our results suggest a model where
a network is formed between hnRNP A1 molecules situated at discrete
sites in the intron and exon and that these interactions preclude
the recognition of essential splicing signals including the
branch point.