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Query: UMLS:C0023418 (
leukemia
)
93,477
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Transcriptional activation endowed by AP-1 or
CREB
binding sites can be significantly reduced in transient transfection tests by expression from the corresponding cloned cDNAs of protein tyrosine phosphatases. Both the protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B and the T-cell protein tyrosine phosphatase, as well as a novel form of this latter protein generated by an alternative splicing even show this activity. The effect is specific, as none of the protein tyrosine phosphatases alters transcriptional activation by either the estrogen receptor, GAL4, or a GAL4-VP16 fusion protein. Furthermore, the activities of the SV40 early gene promoter and a Moloney murine
leukemia
virus long terminal repeat promoter are not reduced by these phosphatases. We conclude that a yet to be identified protein phosphorylated on tyrosine is necessary for a full transcriptional response via AP-1 or
CREB
binding sites.
...
PMID:Activation of transcription via AP-1 or CREB regulatory sites is blocked by protein tyrosine phosphatases. 165 Apr 42
It is proposed here that a form of intracellular immunity can be devised which would protect cells from virus infection and, in particular, could be used as a treatment for the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infected individual. Following in vitro immunization of naive human B lymphocytes with reverse-transcriptase (RT) or HIV
transactivator protein
(
tat
), messenger RNA (mRNA) would be isolated from these cells. Using the mRNA molecules as templates, copy DNA (cDNA) molecules encoding the RT or
tat
-specific immunoglobulins, are prepared and amplified by the polymerase chain reaction. After engineering of the antibody encoding cDNAs to provide appropriate intracellular addressing information, the cDNAs would be used to transfect stem cells of HIV infected individuals in vitro. The presence, in the cytoplasm and nucleus, of antibodies which had been selected to interfere with the reproduction of the virus, would protect these cells from infection. Autologous transplantation of such cells would confer resistance against HIV replication by these stem cells and their progeny in the treated individual. Such a strategy may also be useful against other retroviruses and could provide resistance against retrovirally triggered
leukemia
.
...
PMID:A putative approach for gene therapy against human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). 169 89
Human T-cell lymphotropic virus type I (HTLV-I) has been associated with an adult form of T-cell
leukemia
as well as tropical spastic paraparesis, a neurodegenerative disease. Adult T-cell leukemia patients express high levels of the type 1 isoform of transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta 1), which is mediated by the effects of the HTLV-I Tax
transactivator protein
on the TGF-beta 1 promoter. To understand further the regulation of TGF-beta 1 expression by Tax, we examined its expression in transgenic mice carrying the HTLV-I tax gene. We show that tumors from these mice and other tissues, such as submaxillary glands and skeletal muscle, which express high levels of tax mRNA selectively express high levels of TGF-beta 1 mRNA and protein. Moreover, TGF-beta 1 significantly stimulated the incorporation of tritiated thymidine into one of three cell lines derived from neurofibromas of tax-transgenic mice, which suggests that the excessive production of TGF-beta 1 may play a role in tumorigenesis and that these mice may serve as a useful model for studying the biological effects of TGF-beta in vivo.
...
PMID:Overexpression of transforming growth factor-beta in transgenic mice carrying the human T-cell lymphotropic virus type I tax gene. 192 42
Bovine leukemia virus (BLV), like human T-cell
leukemia
viruses, Types I and II, contains three open reading frames at the 3' end of its genome. The longest open reading frame encodes a
transactivator protein
which is generated by a doubly-spliced mRNA. A series of co-transfection experiments, using proviral BLV pX expression plasmids under the control of the Moloney
leukemia
virus LTR and the indicator plasmid containing the assayable lac Z gene under the control of BLV LTR, revealed that both NIH3T3 cells and non-infected fetal lamb kidney cells are able to express an active
transactivator protein
.
...
PMID:Recombinants from a proviral bovine leukemia virus genome corresponding to the 3' region transactivate viral LTR in NIH3T3 and non-infected FLK cells. 196 62
Human T-cell
leukemia
virus type I (HTLV-I) encodes a 40-kDa nuclear protein, Tax, which stimulates transcription from three 21-base pair (bp) repeats in its U3 region. Tax trans-activation is mediated via cellular factors that interact with the TGACGT motifs in the 21-bp repeats. Gel mobility shift assay and UV cross-linking analysis show that two proteins of 52 and 46 kDa in size bind the 21-bp repeat specifically. Base substitutions in the TGACGT motif which abolished Tax trans-activation abrogated factor binding whereas the repeats containing mutations that did not affect Tax trans-activation supported factor binding as the wild-type repeat. The 52- and 46-kDa factors are present in human T-cell lines Jurkat and MT4 (HTLV-I transformed) and in HeLa cells but are undetectable in a human placental cell line JEG-3, which gave a reduced level of trans-activation. JEG-3 extracts contain a distinct DNA binding activity that shows analogous sequence requirements as the 52- and 46-kDa proteins in interacting with the various 21-bp repeats. c-Jun and
CREB
(cAMP-responsive element binding factor) can stimulate transcription from HTLV-I long terminal repeats in JEG-3 cells. At least two copies of the 21-bp repeats are required for optimal trans-activation by c-Jun and
CREB
. Most single point mutations in the TGACGT motif that abolished Tax trans-activation, however, did not affect c-Jun- or
CREB
-directed transcriptional enhancement. These data indicate that many transcription factors including c-Jun and
CREB
exert stimulatory effects on HTLV-I transcription although they do not directly respond to Tax. The 52- and 46-kDa cellular proteins most likely are involved directly in Tax-mediated trans-activation, and they are tentatively named Tax activation factors I and II, respectively.
...
PMID:Cellular factors involved in transcription and Tax-mediated trans-activation directed by the TGACGT motifs in human T-cell leukemia virus type I promoter. 224 93
We report that the expression of the vimentin gene, a cytoskeletal growth-regulated gene, is activated in trans by the Tax (p40x)
transactivator protein
encoded by the human T-cell
leukemia
virus type I. Expression of the Tax protein activates a number of cellular genes, such as those coding for the alpha chain of the high-affinity interleukin-2 receptor and interleukin-2. These findings indicate that the Tax protein is involved in the unregulated T-cell growth associated with human T-cell
leukemia
virus type I infection. Higher levels of vimentin mRNA were expressed in two human T-cell
leukemia
virus type I-transformed T cell lines, C91/PL and C81-66/45, when compared with that in Jurkat T cells. We demonstrate that this activation is conferred by the vimentin upstream flanking sequences. Indeed, enhanced activity was detected when constructs with the vimentin promoter linked to the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene were transfected in HeLa cells and in two cell lines of hematopoietic origin (Jurkat T lymphoblastoid cells and U937 promonocytic cells) together with a Tax expression plasmid. By introducing a series of deletions in the vimentin promoter, we further restrict these sequences to 30 base pairs, located between 241 and 210 base pairs upstream of the mRNA cap site. A 40-base-pair oligonucleotide containing this regulatory region proved sufficient to confer Tax inducibility upon a heterologous promoter linked to chloramphenicol acetyltransferase. Importantly, this segment includes an 11-base-pair promoter segment that has homology with the binding site for the NF-kappa B transactivating factor. Our findings indicate that constitutive expression of the vimentin gene under the control of the Tax protein may be relevant in understanding the progression of the lymphoproliferative process associated with human T-cell
leukemia
virus type I infection.
...
PMID:Effect of human T-cell leukemia virus type I tax protein on activation of the human vimentin gene. 229 64
The human T-cell
leukemia
virus type I (HTLV-I) promoter contains three copies of imperfect repeats of a 21-base pair sequence designated here as TRE (Tax-response element) that is responsive to the virally encoded
transactivator protein
Tax. We have identified and separated four nuclear proteins from C81-66-45 cells, an HTLV-I immortalized Tax-expressing human T-lymphocyte line (Salahuddin et al., 1983), that interact with the TRE-DNA, none of which are identical with the Tax-protein. The proteins identified have molecular weights of about 32, 36 to 42, 50 and 110 kD. Four different methods were used to identify the proteins. First, from different cell lines three or all four of the nuclear proteins were specifically cross-linked by UV irradiation to the radioactively labeled TRE-DNA fragment. Second, TRE-DNA binding proteins sedimented through a glycerol density gradient at rates corresponding to proteins of native molecular weights of 35 to 50 kD and 110 kD. Third, only the 50 kD protein was retained on a biotinylated DNA-streptavidin matrix when the DNA fragment contained the TRE-DNA. Fourth, extensive purification by several cycles of TRE-DNA affinity chromatography resulted in the 32, 36 to 42 and 110 kD proteins and to less extent the 50 kD factor. Two abundant proteins of 75 and 80 kD were competed out by poly[d(I-C)] in all reactions. The cAMP-response element CRE, TGACGTCA, present in the 21 base-pair sequence, appears to be essential for specific protein-TRE-DNA interactions because mutation of the two G's destroys this complex. This result suggests that the cAMP response element binding protein,
CREB
, is involved in the protein-TRE-DNA complex and in mediating the Tax response.
...
PMID:Tax-independent binding of multiple cellular factors to Tax-response element DNA of HTLV-I. 231 99
We have investigated the biochemical basis for the activation of interleukin 2 receptor alpha-subunit (IL-2R alpha) gene expression in primary human T lymphocytes by a cytokine (tumor necrosis factor alpha), a T-cell mitogen (phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate), and the
transactivator protein
(Tax) from the type I human T-cell
leukemia
virus. Using in vivo transfection techniques specificially designed for these primary T cells in conjunction with in vitro gel retardation and DNA footprinting assays, we found that activation of the IL-2R alpha promoter by each of these agents involves the induction of nuclear proteins that specifically interact with a kappa B-like enhancer element (i.e., an element resembling the immunoglobulin kappa-chain enhancer sequence recognized by transcription factor NF-kappa B). DNA-protein crosslinking studies revealed that primary T cells express at least three different inducible DNA-binding proteins (50-55, 70-75, and 80-90 kDa) that specifically interact with this IL-2R alpha kappa B element.
...
PMID:Tumor necrosis factor alpha induces proteins that bind specifically to kappa B-like enhancer elements and regulate interleukin 2 receptor alpha-chain gene expression in primary human T lymphocytes. 249 63
The
transactivator protein
tax of the human T-cell
leukemia
virus type I, HTLV-I, is responsible for transactivation of gene expression of viral and cellular genes and is involved in the onset of adult T-cell
leukemia
, ATL. Genetic deletion studies have implicated a region of the HTLV-I LTR designated as tax-acceptor region, TAR, which is the target of the tax protein. Using antibodies against a tax carboxyterminal synthetic decapeptide the tax protein was purified from an HTLV-I immortalized human T-lymphocyte cell line by immunoaffinity chromatography. The tax protein, purified to apparent homogeneity binds to double-stranded DNA irrespective of its origin from either a nuclear or cytoplasmic fraction of the HTLV-I immortalized cell-line - both of which harbor similar quantities of tax protein. The tax protein binds less to single-stranded DNA and not to single-stranded RNA in vitro. It also binds to DNA-cellulose and heparin-Sepharose. Nuclease treatment of isolated nuclei does not release the tax protein under conditions which release known DNA-binding proteins, such as the myb protein. Transactivation by the tax protein presumably involves host-cell factors, since it does not recognize specific DNA sequences.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of the tax protein of HTLV-I. 278 66
Activation of T cells by an antigen, a mitogen, or a combination of a phorbol ester (12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate [TPA]) and a calcium ionophore (A23187) leads to induction of a set of lymphokine genes. Treatment of human T-cell
leukemia
line Jurkat by a mitogen or p40x, a
transactivator protein
encoded by human T-cell
leukemia
virus type I, activates many transfected lymphokine genes in a transient transfection assay. To study the mechanism of lymphokine gene induction, we examined the effects of mitogen stimulation and p40x on the gene for the mouse granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) in Jurkat cells. Deletion and mutation analyses showed that the 5'-flanking region of the gene for the GM-CSF is composed of two types of regulatory elements. One sequence, located at positions -95 to -73, determines response to stimulation by either TPA-A23187 or p40x. This region contains conserved lymphokine element 2, which appears in the gene for interleukin 3 (IL-3) and is followed by a GC-rich stretch. This GC-rich stretch alone specifies inducible response to p40x but not to TPA-A23187. Another sequence, located at positions -113 to -96 upstream of a TATA-like sequence, mediates inducible response to p40x but not to TPA-A23187. This sequence includes conserved lymphokine element 1, which appears in several lymphokine-cytokine genes, such as those for IL-3, G-CSF, and IL-2. We previously showed that the simian virus 40 early region promoter was also induced by a mitogen or p40x in Jurkat cells. Deletion analysis showed that the minimum region require for stimulation by both signals are identical. These results, which indicate that p40(x) stimulates transcription of the gene for the GM-CSF or the simian virus 40 early region promoter through the same DNA element or an overlapping DNA element required for induction by a mitogen, lend further support to the notion that p40(x) can exert its function by activating a component(s) of the T-cell signal transduction pathway which is activated by an antigen or a mitogen.
...
PMID:T-cell activation signals and human T-cell leukemia virus type I-encoded p40x protein activate the mouse granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor gene through a common DNA element. 285 2
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