Hines Robert, Sorensen Brenda R, Shea Madeline A, Maury Wendy
Division of Basic Biomedical Science, University of South Dakota, Vermillion, South Dakota 57069, USA.
J Virol. 2004 Apr;78(7):3407-18. doi: 10.1128/jvi.78.7.3407-3418.2004.
Binding of the transcription factor PU.1 to its DNA binding motif regulates the expression of a number of B-cell- and myeloid-specific genes. The long terminal repeat (LTR) of macrophage-tropic strains of equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) contains three PU.1 binding sites, namely an invariant promoter-proximal site as well as two upstream sites. We have previously shown that these sites are important for EIAV LTR activity in primary macrophages (W. Maury, J. Virol. 68:6270-6279, 1994). Since the sequences present in these three binding motifs are not identical, we sought to determine the role of these three sites in EIAV LTR activity. While DNase I footprinting studies indicated that all three sites within the enhancer were bound by recombinant PU.1, reporter gene assays demonstrated that the middle motif was most important for basal levels of LTR activity in macrophages and that the 5' motif had little impact. The impact of the 3' site became evident in Tat transactivation studies, in which the loss of the site reduced Tat-transactivated expression 40-fold. In contrast, elimination of the 5' site had no effect on Tat-mediated activity. Binding studies were performed to determine whether differences in PU.1 binding affinity for the three sites correlated with the relative impact of each site on LTR transcription. While small differences were observed in the binding affinities of the three sites, with the promoter-proximal site having the strongest binding affinity, these differences could not account for the dramatic differences observed in the transcriptional effects. Instead, the promoter-proximal position of the 3' motif appeared to be critical for its transcriptional impact and suggested that the PU.1 sites may serve different roles depending upon the location of the sites within the enhancer. Infectivity studies demonstrated that an LTR containing an enhancer composed of the three PU.1 sites was not sufficient to drive viral replication in macrophages. These findings indicate that while the promoter-proximal PU.1 site is the most critical site for EIAV LTR activity in the presence of Tat, other elements within the enhancer are needed for EIAV replication in macrophages.
转录因子PU.1与其DNA结合基序的结合调控许多B细胞和髓系特异性基因的表达。马传染性贫血病毒(EIAV)嗜巨噬细胞株的长末端重复序列(LTR)包含三个PU.1结合位点,即一个恒定的启动子近端位点以及两个上游位点。我们之前已经表明,这些位点对原代巨噬细胞中的EIAV LTR活性很重要(W. Maury,《病毒学杂志》68:6270 - 6279,1994)。由于这三个结合基序中的序列并不相同,我们试图确定这三个位点在EIAV LTR活性中的作用。虽然DNase I足迹分析表明增强子内的所有三个位点都被重组PU.1结合,但报告基因分析表明,中间基序对巨噬细胞中LTR活性的基础水平最为重要,而5'基序影响很小。3'位点的影响在Tat反式激活研究中变得明显,其中该位点的缺失使Tat反式激活的表达降低了40倍。相反,消除5'位点对Tat介导的活性没有影响。进行结合研究以确定PU.1对这三个位点的结合亲和力差异是否与每个位点对LTR转录的相对影响相关。虽然在这三个位点的结合亲和力上观察到了小的差异,启动子近端位点具有最强的结合亲和力,但这些差异并不能解释在转录效应中观察到的巨大差异。相反,3'基序的启动子近端位置似乎对其转录影响至关重要,并表明PU.1位点可能根据其在增强子内的位置发挥不同的作用。感染性研究表明,含有由三个PU.1位点组成的增强子的LTR不足以驱动病毒在巨噬细胞中的复制。这些发现表明,虽然在存在Tat的情况下,启动子近端PU.1位点是EIAV LTR活性最关键的位点,但增强子内的其他元件对于EIAV在巨噬细胞中的复制是必需的。