Naturally Occurring Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Long Terminal Repeats Have a Frequently Observed Duplication That Binds RBF-2 and Represses Transcription

Author:

Estable Mario Clemente123,Bell Brendan1,Hirst Martin1,Sadowski Ivan1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology1 and

2. Department of Pathology,2 Faculty of Medicine, UBC Center for Excellence in HIV/AIDS, and

3. St. Paul’s Hospital,3 Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

Abstract

ABSTRACT Approximately 38% of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-infected patients within the Vancouver Lymphadenopathy-AIDS Study have proviruses bearing partial 15- to 34-nucleotide duplications upstream of the NF-κB binding sites within the 5′ long terminal repeat (LTR). This most frequent naturally occurring length polymorphism (MFNLP) of the HIV-1 5′ LTR encompasses potential binding sites for several candidate transcription factors, including TCF-1α/hLEF, c-Ets, AP-4, and Ras-responsive binding factor 2 (RBF-2) (M. C. Estable et al., J. Virol. 70:4053–4062, 1996). RBF-2 and an apparently related factor, RBF-1, bind to at least four cis elements within the LTR which are required for full transcriptional responsiveness to protein-tyrosine kinases and v-Ras (B. Bell and I. Sadowski, Oncogene 13:2687–2697, 1996). Here we demonstrate that representative MFNLPs from two patients specifically bind RBF-2. In both cases, deletion of the MFNLP caused elevated LTR-directed transcription in cells expressing RBF-2 but not in cells with undetectable RBF-2. RBF-1, but not RBF-2, appears to contain the Ets transcription factor family member GABPα/GABPβ1. Taken together with the fact that every MFNLP from a comparative study of over 500 LTR sequences from 42 patients contains a predicted binding site for RBF-2, our data suggest that the MFNLP is selected in vivo because it provides a duplicated RBF-2 cis element, which may limit transcription in monocytes and activated T cells.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology

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