Skip to main content
Molecular Medicine logoLink to Molecular Medicine
. 2000 May;6(5):377–390.

A repression-derepression mechanism regulating the transcription of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 in primary T cells.

A Mouzaki 1, A Doucet 1, E Mavroidis 1, L Muster 1, D Rungger 1
PMCID: PMC1949956  PMID: 10952019

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Despite some controversy regarding the preferential infection and replication of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1), it appears that primary T lymphocytes, in their quiescent state, are nonpermissive for viral expression and propagation. Massive activation of viral gene expression occurs only when the host lymphocyte is activated. These observations prompted us to investigate the transcriptional regulation of HIV-1 in resting or activated T cells that were isolated from cord blood or adult peripheral blood. MATERIALS AND METHODS: To this end, we employed cellular purification and phenotyping techniques, in vitro protein-DNA binding studies, functional transactivation assays using proteins isolated from cord blood or adult peripheral blood T lymphocytes, and transfection experiments in primary T cells. RESULTS: We showed that transcription from the HIV-1 long terminal repeat is repressed in resting naive T lymphocytes; whereas, mitogenically stimulated CD4+ cells form an activator that derepresses transcription. Negative and positive regulation act through a repressor-activator target sequence (RATS), which shares homology with the interleukin-2 (IL-2) purine-rich response element, through the adjacent binding site of the nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT), and weakly, through the KB region. CONCLUSIONS: This regulation exerted by cellular transcription factors can account for several important features of HIV-1 expression in primary CD4+ cells. Tight repression in resting naive T helper cells may be a main cause of viral latency and transcriptional activation accounts for massive viral production in activated T lymphocytes.

Full Text

The Full Text of this article is available as a PDF (189.8 KB).


Articles from Molecular Medicine are provided here courtesy of The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research at North Shore LIJ

RESOURCES