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Multiple NF-κB Sites in HIV-1 Subtype C Long Terminal Repeat Confer Superior Magnitude of Transcription and Thereby the Enhanced Viral Predominance

Authors :
Nirmala Rajagopalan
Madhu Vajpayee
Venkat S. Yadavalli
Ujjwal Neogi
Anita Shet
Tapas K. Kundu
Udaykumar Ranga
Narayana Cheedarla
Rajesh V. Murali
Raghavendra Bhatt
Shilpee Sharma
Anjali Verma
Anil Babu Mukthey
Swarupa Yalla
Pachamuthu Balakrishnan
Roshan Elizabeth Rajan
Mangaiarkarasi Asokan
Susarla K. Shankar
Kuan-Teh Jeang
Mahesh Bachu
Shanmugam Saravanan
Snehajyoti Chatterjee
Kadappa Shivappa Satish
Anita Mahadevan
Suniti Solomon
Source :
Journal of Biological Chemistry. 287:44714-44735
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2012.

Abstract

We demonstrate that at least three different promoter variant strains of HIV-1 subtype C have been gradually expanding and replacing the standard subtype C viruses in India, and possibly in South Africa and other global regions, over the past decade. The new viral strains contain an additional NF-κB, NF-κB-like, or RBEIII site in the viral promoter. Although the acquisition of an additional RBEIII site is a property shared by all the HIV-1 subtypes, acquiring an additional NF-κB site remains an exclusive property of subtype C. The acquired κB site is genetically distinct, binds the p50-p65 heterodimer, and strengthens the viral promoter at the levels of transcription initiation and elongation. The 4-κB viruses dominate the 3-κB "isogenic" viral strains in pairwise competition assays in T-cell lines, primary cells, and the ecotropic human immunodeficiency virus mouse model. The dominance of the 4-κB viral strains is also evident in the natural context when the subjects are coinfected with κB-variant viral strains. The mean plasma viral loads, but not CD4 counts, are significantly different in 4-κB infection suggesting that these newly emerging strains are probably more infectious. It is possible that higher plasma viral loads underlie selective transmission of the 4-κB viral strains. Several publications previously reported duplication or deletion of diverse transcription factor-binding sites in the viral promoter. Unlike previous reports, our study provides experimental evidence that the new viral strains gained a potential selective advantage as a consequence of the acquired transcription factor-binding sites and importantly that these strains have been expanding at the population level.

Details

ISSN :
00219258
Volume :
287
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ea74c368d2037ba4d339ab7a9ba1e1aa
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.m112.397158