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Rapamycin-induced inhibition of HTLV-I LTR activity is rescued by c-Myb.


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Authors

Rose, Nicola J 
Lever, Andrew ML 

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Rapamycin is an immunosuppressive which represses translation of transcripts harbouring a polypyrimidine motif downstream of the mRNA cap site through the mammalian target of rapamycin complex. It inhibits the abnormal autologous proliferation of T-cell clones containing a transcriptionally active human T-lymphotropic virus, type I (HTLV-I) provirus, generated from infected subjects. We showed previously that this effect is independent of the polypyrimidine motifs in the viral long terminal repeat (LTR) R region suggesting that HTLV-I transcription, and not translation, is being affected. Here we studied whether rapamycin is having an effect on a specific transcription factor pathway. Further, we investigated whether mRNAs encoding transcription factors involved in HTLV-I transcriptional activation, specifically CREB, Ets and c-Myb, are implicated in the rapamycin-sensitivity of the HTLV-I LTR. RESULTS: An in vitro analysis of the role of SRE- and NF-kappaB-mediated transcription highlighted the latter as rapamycin sensitive. Over-expression of c-Myb reversed the rapamycin effect. CONCLUSION: The sensitivity of HTLV-I transcription to rapamycin may be effected through an NF-kappaB-pathway associated with the rapamycin-sensitive mTORC1 cellular signalling network.

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Keywords

Artificial Gene Fusion, Chloramphenicol O-Acetyltransferase, Deltaretrovirus, Genes, Reporter, Human T-lymphotropic virus 1, Humans, NF-kappa B, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-myb, Sirolimus, Terminal Repeat Sequences, Transcription, Genetic

Journal Title

Retrovirology

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1742-4690
1742-4690

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC