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Journal of Virology, December 1999, p. 10406-10415, Vol. 73, No. 12
0022-538X/99/$04.00+0

Increased Induction of Osteopetrosis, but Unaltered Lymphomagenicity, by Murine Leukemia Virus SL3-3 after Mutation of a Nuclear Factor 1 Site in the Enhancer

Steen Ethelberg,1,2,dagger Barbara D. Tzschaschel,1 Arne Luz,3 Salvador J. Diaz-Cano,3,4 Finn Skou Pedersen,2,5 and Jörg Schmidt1,*

Institute of Molecular Virology1 and Institute of Pathology,3 GSF-National Research Center for Environment and Health, D-85764 Neuherberg, Germany; Department of Molecular and Structural Biology2 and Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology,5 University of Aarhus, DK-8000 Aarhus C, Denmark; and Department of Morbid Anatomy, Royal London Hospital, Whitechapel, London E1 1BB, United Kingdom4

Received 5 May 1999/Accepted 8 September 1999

SL3-3 is a murine leukemia virus which is only weakly bone pathogenic but highly T-cell lymphomagenic. A major pathogenic determinant is the transcriptional enhancer comprising several transcription factor binding sites, among which are three identical sites for nuclear factor 1 (NF1). We have investigated the pathogenic properties of NF1 site enhancer mutants of SL3-3. Two different mutants carrying a 3-bp mutation either in all three NF1 sites or in the central site alone were constructed and assayed in inbred NMRI mice. The wild type and both mutants induced lymphomas in all mice, with a mean latency period of 9 weeks. However, there was a considerable difference in osteopetrosis induction. Wild-type SL3-3 induced osteopetrosis in 11% of the mice (2 of 19), and the triple NF1 site mutant induced osteopetrosis in none of the mice (0 of 19), whereas the single NF1 site mutant induced osteopetrosis in 56% (10 of 18) of the mice, as determined by X-ray analysis. A detailed histological examination of the femurs of the mice was carried out and found to support this diagnosis. Thus, the NF1 sites of SL3-3 are major determinants of osteopetrosis induction, without determining lymphomagenesis. This conclusion was further supported by evaluation of the bone pathogenicity of other SL3-3 enhancer variants, the lymphomagenicity of which had been examined previously. This evaluation furthermore strongly indicated that the core sites, a second group of transcription factor binding sites in the viral enhancer, are necessary for the osteopetrosis induction potential of SL3-3.


* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institute of Molecular Virology, GSF-National Research Center for Environment and Health, Ingolstaedter Landstr. 1, D-85764 Neuherberg, Germany. Phone: 49 89 3187 2635. Fax: 49 89 3187 3329. E-mail: Schmidt{at}gsf.de.

dagger Present address: Imperial Cancer Research Fund, Clare Hall Laboratories, South Mimms, Herts. EN6 3LD, United Kingdom.


Journal of Virology, December 1999, p. 10406-10415, Vol. 73, No. 12
0022-538X/99/$04.00+0



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