Reference : Synergistic activation of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 promoter activity by NF-ka...
Scientific journals : Article
Human health sciences : Immunology & infectious disease
http://hdl.handle.net/2268/3627
Synergistic activation of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 promoter activity by NF-kappa B and inhibitors of deacetylases: Potential perspectives for the development of therapeutic strategies
English
Quivy, Vincent [> > > >]
Adam, Emmanuelle [> > > >]
Collette, Yves [> > > >]
Demonte, Dominique [> > > >]
Chariot, Alain mailto [Université de Liège - ULg > Département de pharmacie > Chimie médicale >]
Vanhulle, Caroline [> > > >]
Berkhout, Ben [> > > >]
Castellano, Rémy [> > > >]
de Launoit, Yvan [> > > >]
Burny, Arsène [> > > >]
Piette, Jacques mailto [Université de Liège - ULg > Département des sciences de la vie > Virologie - Immunologie >]
Bours, Vincent mailto [Université de Liège - ULg > Département des sciences biomédicales et précliniques > Génétique générale et humaine]
Van Lint, Carine [> > > >]
Nov-2002
Journal of Virology
Amer Soc Microbiology
76
21
11091-11103
International
0022-538X
Washington
[en] The transcription factor NF-kappaB plays a central role in the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) activation pathway. HIV-1 transcription is also regulated by protein acetylation, since treatment with deacetylase inhibitors such as trichostatin A (TSA) or sodium butyrate (NaBut) markedly induces HIV-1 transcriptional activity of the long terminal repeat (LTR) promoter. Here, we demonstrate that TSA (NaBut) synergized with both ectopically expressed p50/p65 and tumor necrosis factor alpha/SF2 (TNF)-induced NF-kappaB to activate the LTR. This was confirmed for LTRs from subtypes A through G of the HIV-1 major group, with a positive correlation between the number Of kappaB sites present in the LTRs and the amplitude of the TNF-TSA synergism. Mechanistically, TSA (NaBut) delayed the cytoplasmic recovery of the inhibitory protein IkappaBalpha. This coincided with a prolonged intranuclear presence and DNA binding activity of NF-kappaB. The physiological relevance of the TNF-TSA (NaBut) synergism was shown on HIV-1 replication in both acutely and latently HIV-infected cell lines. Therefore, our results open new therapeutic strategies aimed at decreasing or eliminating the pool of latently HIV-infected reservoirs by forcing viral expression.
Giga-Signal Transduction
FNRS, TELEVIE, FBC, ARC ULG
Researchers ; Professionals ; Students
http://hdl.handle.net/2268/3627

File(s) associated to this reference

Fulltext file(s):

FileCommentaryVersionSizeAccess
Open access
11. Publication J. Virology.pdfNo commentaryPublisher postprint1.57 MBView/Open

Bookmark and Share SFX Query

All documents in ORBi are protected by a user license.