Abstract
AbstractThe regulation of transcription from Epstein-Barr virus promoters is known to involve the association of the host CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF) protein. This control involves direct binding of CTCF across the EBV genome and the formation of three-dimensional loops between virus promoters and enhancers. We sought to address how the deletion of a CTCF binding site upstream of the C-promoter (Cp) affected viral transcription in infected lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs) and how binding of the EBV trans-activating protein EBNA2 was changed across this promoter. Transcript level from Cp was up-regulated with CTCF binding site deletion, and transcription from other promoters (Wp and Qp) was decreased, while transcript levels were largely unchanged by independent mutation of a Cp-RBPJκ binding site. In turn, expression of EBNA2 protein was also increased, likely driven by increases in polycistronic EBNA2-encoding transcripts. Finally, Cp up-regulation was associated with an 8-fold increase in EBNA2 enrichment across Cp, concomitant with increased association of the associated cellular factor RBPJκ, probably due to a more accessible three-dimensional chromatin conformation upstream of Cp. Overall, the data presented here confirm that binding of CTCF directly upstream of Cp is important for the regulation of transcription from this and other EBV promoters.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory