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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (HIV)
170,526 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) activates transcription from the long terminal repeat (LTR) promoter region of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). HSV-1 immediate-early (IE) genes ICP0 and ICP4 are thought to be important mediators of this process, which is known to involve the induction of the cellular activators NF-kappa B and Sp1. We demonstrate that ICP0 and ICP4 transactivation of the LTR is largely dependent on the presence of NF-kappa B and Sp1 binding sites. However, in Jurkat CD4-positive lymphocytes, HSV-1 activates LTR constructs lacking all NF-kappa B or Sp1 Binding sequences. This effect is still evident when all sequences upstream of the TATA motif are removed. Such enhancer-independent transactivation can be produced by cotransfection of ICP0 and ICP4. Thus HSV-1 IE genes transactivate the HIV-1 LTR both through the induction of NF-kappa B and Sp1 and through another as yet undefined cellular factor.
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PMID:Transactivation of the HIV-1 LTR by HSV-1 immediate-early genes. 131 Jan 99

Sequence variation in the long terminal repeat (LTR) region of HIV-1 was analyzed in viral isolates of 17 infected individuals. Two classes of LTR size variants were found. One HIV-1 variant was detected containing an additional binding site for the transcription factor Sp1. Another LTR size variation was observed in four patients in a region just upstream of the NF-kappa B enhancer. This variation was the result of a duplication of a short DNA sequence (CTG-motif). Cell culture experiments demonstrated that the natural variant with four Sp1 sites had a slightly higher promoter activity and viral replication rate than the isogenic control LTR with three Sp1 sites. No positive effect of the duplicated CTG-motif could be detected. In order to measure small differences in virus production more accurately, equal amounts of a size variant and the wild-type plasmid were cotransfected into T-cells. The virus with four Sp1 sites did outgrow the three Sp1 virus in 35 days of culture and CTG-monomer virus outcompeted the CTG-dimer virus in 42 days. Based on these results we estimate a 5-10% difference in virus production of the LTR variants when compared to that of wild-type.
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PMID:Natural variants of the HIV-1 long terminal repeat: analysis of promoters with duplicated DNA regulatory motifs. 144 31

NF kappa B is a potent mediator of specific gene expression in human monocytes and has been shown to play a role in transcription of the HIV-1 genome in promonocytic leukemias. There is little information available on the response of NF kappa B to cytokines in normal human monocytes. We have used a 32P-labeled oligonucleotide derived from human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) long terminal repeat, which contains a tandem repeat of the NF kappa B binding sequence, as a probe in a gel retardation assay to study this transcription factor. Using this assay, we have detected NF kappa B in extracts of nuclei from normal human monocytes. Treatment of normal monocytes with 12-0-tetradecanoyl phorbol-13-acetate (TPA) for 4-24 h caused the complete disappearance of NF kappa B from nuclear extracts of monocytes. A similar result was obtained with the mature monocytic leukemia cell line THP-1. The constitutive transcription factor SP1 was unaffected by addition of TPA. The disappearance of NF kappa B from the nucleus was concentration dependent between 10 and 50 ng/ml of phorbol ester. In THP-1 cells, TPA also induced a new, faster-migrating NF kappa B species not induced in monocytes. Protein kinase C inhibitor staurosporine, but not cyclic nucleotide-dependent protein kinase inhibitor HA-1004, also dramatically reduced constitutive levels of nuclear NF kappa B. Finally, TPA addition to monocytes infected with HIV-1 inhibited HIV-1 replication, as determined by reverse transcriptase assays, in a concentration-dependent manner. These results are in striking contrast to the increase in nuclear NF kappa B and HIV-1 replication induced by phorbol esters in promonocytic leukemia cells U937 and HL-60, and emphasize the importance of studying cytokine regulation of HIV-1 in normal monocytes.
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PMID:Phorbol ester reduces constitutive nuclear NF kappa B and inhibits HIV-1 production in mature human monocytic cells. 146 36

The effect on human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) viral transcription and subsequent gene expression mediated by mixed purine-pyrimidine oligodeoxyribonucleotides (oligodeoxynucleotides) designed to form collinear DNA triplexes with purine-rich elements in the viral promoter was evaluated in intact mammalian cell lines (MT4 and U937). Oligonucleotides HIV31 (5'-GTTTTTGGGTGTTGTGGGTGTGTGTGGTTTG-3') and HIV38 (5'-TGGGTGGGGTGGGGTGGGGGGGTGTGGGGTGTGGGGTG-3') were designed to interact with the transcription initiation site (-16 to + 13) and nuclear factor Sp1 binding site (-81 to -44) of HIV-1, respectively. Oligonucleotides, synthesized with a 3' amine blocking group (5'-R-O-PO2-OCH (CHOH)-CH2-NH+3-3') to prevent degradation by cellular nucleases, were readily taken up by MT4 cells from the culture medium, achieving measured intranuclear concentrations higher than the medium in less than 2 h of incubation. The 3' amine modified oligonucleotides were recoverable from the cells after 24 h as greater than 90% intact material. Treatment of acutely infected MT4 cells with either HIV31 or HIV38 significantly inhibited viral-associated cytopathology and P24 antigen production (p less than 0.001). Additionally, inhibition of P24 antigen release, culture supernatant viral titer, and expression of the intact 9.2-kb HIV-1 mRNA was observed when the chronically infected promonocyte cell line, U937, was treated with 10 microM HIV38. Control oligonucleotides with similar base composition did not inhibit virus expression in either cell line. Furthermore, inhibition of viral expression was not due to alpha-interferon induction resulting from oligonucleotide treatment. Both HIV31 and HIV38 associate with their respective DNA target duplexes at micromolar concentrations, and a strong negative ellipticity near 210 nm, characteristic of DNA triplexes, was observed in the circular dichroism spectrum of either target-oligonucleotide complex. These observations suggest that oligonucleotides, designed to form nucleic acid triplexes with specific proviral target sequences, can selectively inhibit transcription of viral mRNA in intact cells and suppress accumulation of viral products.
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PMID:Inhibition of transcription of HIV-1 in infected human cells by oligodeoxynucleotides designed to form DNA triple helices. 154 43

We have previously shown that the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Tat protein can activate a synthetic promoter containing consensus-binding sites for the cellular transcription factor Sp1. In this report, we show that a GAL-Tat fusion protein targeted via GAL4 DNA-binding sites can also trans activate an HIV-1 LTR promoter independently of the trans-activation response region. To show that the trans activation of the promoter by Tat directly involves the Sp1 protein, we have targeted a GAL-Sp1 fusion protein to the long terminal repeat promoter via upstream GAL4-binding sites. In the presence of Tat and GAL-Sp1, the promoter is synergistically trans activated at the transcriptional level, indicating that Tat and Sp1 functionally interact to trans activate the HIV-1 promoter. The Sp1 synergism is relatively specific, since another chimeric transcriptional activator, GAL-VP16, does not appear to be significantly synergistic with Tat.
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PMID:Synergistic activation of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 promoter by the viral Tat protein and cellular transcription factor Sp1. 158 36

A highly divergent HIV-2 designated as HIV-2[GH-2] was obtained from an AIDS-related complex (ARC) patient in Ghana. A full-length molecular clone of this isolate was obtained and a biologically active clone was constructed. Its restriction pattern differed from that of prototype HIV-2[GH-1] in 25 of 35 restriction sites, but was strikingly similar to a previously characterized HIV-2 isolate from a Ghanaian (HIV-2ALT). The conserved integrase region (288-bp fragment) previously displayed 95% identity with that of ALT but 17-20% divergence from the HIV-2 prototype member, and a new distinct subgroup (HIV-2b) of HIV-2 consisting of GH-2 and ALT was postulated (Miura et al. 1991.) These isolates, however, were biologically distinguishable from each other by its replication capacity in a monocyte line, U937, in which GH-2 could not grow but ALT grew well. In addition, the nucleotide sequence of the LTR of this new isolate displays 21% divergence from that of prototype HIV-2[GH-1], but the core enhancer, Sp1 binding sites and TATA box were conserved. Although the 3' half of the env gene sequence which is deleted in HIV-2ALT clone showed 27% diversity from the prototype, functional differences in the rev-responsive element were not observed.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of a highly divergent HIV-2[GH-2]: generation of an infectious molecular clone and functional analysis of its rev-responsive element in response to primate retrovirus transactivators (Rev and Rex). 158 52

We demonstrate that multiple SP1 protein:DNA binding sites confer enhancer-independent activation on the HIV-1 and globin gene promoters. This activation process can be achieved either by DNA replication of the promoter-containing plasmid or by high concentrations of input plasmid DNA used in the transfections. In the case of HIV-1, the three SP1 sites adjacent to the promoters TATA box are essential for this activation process. Furthermore, the human beta globin gene, which is normally dependent on a linked enhancer for transcriptional activity, can be made enhancer independent by insertion of SP1 binding sites adjacent to its TATA box. We speculate that (SP1)n-TATA type RNA polymerase II promoters may be generally permissive when present on actively replicating DNA templates and that this property of the HIV-1 promoter may be of importance to the activation of the DNA provirus in latently infected T cells.
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PMID:Multiple SP1 binding sites confer enhancer-independent, replication-activated transcription of HIV-1 and globin gene promoters. 162 32

We have analyzed the contributory role of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) promoter and enhancers in basal and Tat-induced transcription. We found that a minimal promoter competent for basal expression is contained within sequences spanning nucleotides -43 to +80. Basal expression from this HIV-1 promoter was boosted more by the additional presence of the NF-kappa B elements than by the Sp1 elements. The minimal long terminal repeat promoter (-43 to +80), while having an intact TAR sequence, was not Tat inducible. However, the simple addition of short synthetic enhancer motifs (AP1, Oct, Sp1, and NF-kappa B) conferred Tat responsiveness. This ability to respond to Tat was in part dependent on the presence of the HIV-1 promoter. Changing the HIV-1 TATA to other eucaryotic TATA or non-TATA initiators minimally affected basal expression but altered Tat inducibility. Our findings suggest a specific context of functional promoter and enhancer elements that is optimal for Tat trans activation of the HIV-1 long terminal repeat. Our results do not allow conclusions about whether Tat acts at the level of initiation or at the level of elongation to be drawn.
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PMID:Functional roles for the TATA promoter and enhancers in basal and Tat-induced expression of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 long terminal repeat. 172 76

Our studies originally demonstrated that the v-rel oncoprotein repressed gene expression in chicken lymphoid cells, while it activated transcription in rodent fibroblasts. Here we report that the c-rel protein can activate expression of genes linked to kappa B motifs when low levels of endogenous kappa B-binding activity are present. In contrast v-rel, and to a lesser extent c-rel, inhibit NF-kappa B-mediated activation of the human immunodeficiency virus long terminal repeat (HIV LTR) in phorbol ester-stimulated HeLa cells. Competition assays show that v-rel competitively inhibits both NF-kappa B and c-rel-mediated transcriptional activation. Analysis of mutant HIV LTR-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) constructs in which all Sp1 or both NF-kappa B elements have been deleted shows that NF-kappa B motifs are required for rel-mediated effects on gene expression. Transforming v-rel mutants compete efficiently with phorbol ester-activated kappa B factors, whereas a transformation-defective mutant of v-rel is impaired in this activity. Taken together, these results strengthen the hypothesis that v-rel functions as a dominant interfering member of rel family proteins. These results also suggest that the ability of v- and c-rel to activate or repress gene expression in specific cells may result from their capacity to compete with endogenous rel family proteins whose expression and/or activity are cell-specific.
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PMID:Transcriptional activity of rel family proteins. 174 Nov 61

Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) is viable and mitogen inducible in the absence of its binding sites for the inducible transcription factor NF-kappa B. We have investigated alternative mechanisms for induction of HIV-1 transcription. Using transient transfection assays, we found that transcription from an HIV-1 LTR containing mutant kappa B sites was activated 10- to 20-fold in a variety of human cell types by the phorbol ester phorbol myristate acetate (PMA). The promoter elements conferring this inducibility were localized to the region downstream of nucleotide -70, which contains the TATA and TAR elements and binding sites for transcription factors Sp1 and LBP-1. Synthetic promoters containing only Sp1 sites and a TATA element were also induced in transfection experiments as well as in in vitro transcription experiments with T-cell nuclear extracts. Moreover, promoters containing a TATA box in the absence of Sp1 sites or Sp1 sites in the absence of a TATA box were equally inducible in vitro, as was an RNA polymerase III promoter. The activities of RNA polymerases II and III and of the 38-kDa TATA-binding protein transcription factor IID (TFIID), were not induced by PMA, but electrophoretic mobility shift assays revealed a highly inducible protein-DNA complex that interacted specifically with the TATA sequence. This protein-DNA complex appeared to be much larger than that found with the 38-kDa human TFIID expressed in bacteria. Taken together, these data suggest that a component of the general transcription machinery, and possibly a TFIID-associated protein, is induced in T cells by PMA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Alternative pathway for induction of human immunodeficiency virus gene expression: involvement of the general transcription machinery. 189 93


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