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Journal of Virology, October 1999, p. 7981-7987, Vol. 73, No. 10
0022-538X/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Induction of Bcl-xL Expression by Human T-Cell
Leukemia Virus Type 1 Tax through NF-
B in
Apoptosis-Resistant T-Cell Transfectants with Tax
Tomonori
Tsukahara,1
Mari
Kannagi,1,2,*
Takashi
Ohashi,1
Hirotomo
Kato,1
Masaaki
Arai,3
Gabriel
Nunez,4
Youichi
Iwanaga,3
Naoki
Yamamoto,3
Kiyoshi
Ohtani,5
Masataka
Nakamura,5 and
Masahiro
Fujii6
Department of
Immunotherapeutics1 and Department of
Molecular Virology,3 Medical Research Division,
and Human Gene Sciences Center,5 Tokyo
Medical and Dental University, Tokyo 113, CREST, Japan Science
and Technology Corporation, Saitama 332,2 and
Department of Virology, Niigata University School of Medicine,
Niigata 951,6 Japan, and Department
of Pathology, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor,
Michigan 481094
Received 10 February 1999/Accepted 14 June 1999
 |
ABSTRACT |
Human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1) Tax is thought to play
a pivotal role in immortalization of T cells. We have recently shown
that the expression of Tax protected the mouse T-cell line CTLL-2
against apoptosis induced by interleukin-2 (IL-2) deprivation and
converted its growth from being IL-2 dependent to being IL-2 independent. In this study, we demonstrate that constitutive expression of bcl-xl but not bcl-2, bcl-xs,
bak, bad, or bax was associated with apoptosis resistance after IL-2 deprivation in CTLL-2 cells that
expressed Tax. Transient-transfection assays showed that bcl-x promoter was transactivated by wild-type Tax. Similar
effects were observed in mutant Tax retaining transactivating ability through NF-
B. Deletion or substitution of a putative NF-
B binding site identified in the bcl-x promoter significantly
decreased Tax-induced transactivation. This NF-
B-like element was
able to form a complex with NF-
B family proteins in vitro.
Furthermore, Tax-induced transactivation of the bcl-x
promoter was also diminished by the mutant I
B
, which specifically
inhibits NF-
B activity. Our findings suggest that constitutive
expression of Bcl-xL induced by Tax through the NF-
B
pathway contributes to the inhibition of apoptosis in CTLL-2 cells
after IL-2 deprivation.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 (HTLV-1) is the etiological agent of adult T-cell leukemia (22,
34). HTLV-1 encodes a 40-kDa regulatory protein, Tax, that
accelerates viral gene expression (6, 13, 15, 39, 41). This
protein is thought to be responsible for the transforming features of
HTLV-1. This conclusion is supported by several lines of evidence, such
as in vitro transformation of rodent fibroblasts and human T cells (1, 27, 46) and in vivo induction of a variety of
mesenchymal tumors and leukemia in transgenic mice carrying the
tax gene (20, 29).
Various mechanisms of T-cell leukemogenesis by HTLV-1 Tax have been
proposed. Some of them relate to the transcriptional activator function
of this protein. Tax activates the transcription of not only HTLV-1
itself but also a number of cellular genes in trans. This
transactivation by Tax is mediated through interaction with transcriptional factors CREB, NF-
B, and serum response factor (14, 42-44, 56). Thus, the expression of a variety of
target genes related to cellular activation and growth is enhanced by Tax. These include genes for interleukin-2 (IL-2), IL-6,
granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, the
chain of IL-2
receptor, Fra-1, c-Myc, c-Fos, and c-Jun (36, 55). Aberrant
expression of these proteins could be involved in the dysregulated
proliferation of HTLV-1-infected cells.
Recent studies support another hypothesis; that Tax may induce cell
cycle promotion through protein-protein interaction. Suzuki et al.
(45) demonstrated that Tax binds and inactivates
p16INK4a, a negative regulatory molecule of the cell cycle.
Tax may also directly associate with cyclin D, which is important in
cell cycle transition from G1 to S phase (30).
Tax also influences cell apoptosis. We and others have previously shown
that human T-cell lines expressing Tax were resistant to apoptosis
signals triggered through Fas receptors (2, 9). A similar
resistance to apoptosis was observed in T cells derived from transgenic
mice carrying the tax gene (25). Resistance to
cell apoptosis is one of the mechanisms of autoimmunity and is also an
important requirement for the immortalization of T cells (7,
33). Other investigators, however, have reported opposite
observations; Tax induces apoptosis of rat fibroblasts and a human
T-cell line under certain conditions (7, 53). The precise
mechanisms of the Tax effect on apoptosis are not well understood.
We have recently shown that the expression of Tax in a mouse T-cell
line CTLL-2 converted its growth from being IL-2 dependent to being
IL-2 independent. Not only promotion of cell cycle but also prevention
of apoptosis occurred in these cells in the absence of IL-2
(23). In the present study, we investigated the mechanisms by which Tax prevents apoptosis. We demonstrated (i) that constitutive expression of Bcl-xL, one of the molecules protecting cells
against apoptosis, is associated with resistance of CTLL-2/Tax
transfectants to apoptosis induced by IL-2 deprivation and (ii) that
Tax transactivates bcl-xl through the NF-
B pathway. This
is the first report that indicates the involvement of
Bcl-xL in HTLV-1 Tax-induced inhibition of apoptosis in T cells.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plasmids.
Plasmids containing wild-type tax
(p
MT-2Tax), mutant tax genes (p
Tax703 and p
TaxM22)
driven by a
-actin promoter, and its control plasmid
(pH
APr-1-neo) were used (21, 26). Wild-type Tax encoded
in p
MT-2Tax is effective in the activating NF-
B, CArG, and CRE
sites. On the other hand, the Tax mutant encoded by p
Tax703 can
activate the NF-
B site but not the CArG or the CRE site, while the
Tax mutant encoded by p
TaxM22 can activate the CArG and CRE site but
hardly the NF-
B site (40, 44). We also used the mouse
bcl-x promoter-driven luciferase (Luc) reporter plasmid
pGL2-3.2, which contained a 3.2-kbp fragment upstream of the
bcl-x gene (19). pGL2(1160), pGL2(848),
pGL2(822), and pGL2(631) were newly generated by insertion of DNA
fragments of the bcl-x promoter at the base positions of
1160 to
75,
848 to
75,
822 to
75, and
631 to
75 from
the translation initiation ATG of the bcl-x gene,
respectively, into the basic pGL2 vector containing a Luc reporter gene
(Promega, Madison, Wis.). These DNA fragments were amplified by PCR
with DNA templates extracted from CTLL-2 cells and four sense primers,
(5'-CCGCTCGAGGAGGTCTCCACTGTGGGAGC-3', 5'-CCGCTCGAGGGAAGTCCCTTTAGGGTTTC-3',
5'-CTCATCTAGGGCTGGTACTT-3', and
5'-CCGCTCGAGTGGTCGATGGAGGAACCAGG-3') and one antisense
primer (5'-GAAGATCTAGCGATTCTCTTCCAGGATC-3'). pGL
BM
is a mutant of pGL2(848), carrying CC-to-GG mutations at
positions of
841 and
840 within the NF-
B binding site, which
were generated by PCR by using primers with the mutation. Plasmid
integrity was confirmed by DNA sequencing. Another Luc reporter
plasmid, WT-Luc, containing five tandem repeats of 21-bp Tax-inducible
CREs of HTLV-1 LTR originated from 21WT-CAT (16), was kindly
provided by J. Fujisawa (Kansai Medical University, Osaka, Japan).
pcDNA3-I
B
M was constructed by cloning an
I
B
M-coding region in pBluescript SK(
)-I
B
S32A/S36A, a kind gift from J. Inoue (Tokyo University, Tokyo,
Japan), into pcDNA3 (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif.) with the
cytomegalovirus promoter. pSV-
-Galactosidase Vector (Promega) was
also used.
Cell lines and transfections.
The mouse IL-2-dependent
T-cell line CTLL-2 (18) was maintained in RPMI 1640 medium
with 10% fetal calf serum (FCS) (RPMI-10% FCS), 50 µM
2-mercaptoethanol and 1 nM human recombinant IL-2 (hrIL-2; Ajinomoto,
Yokohama, Japan) at 37°C and 5% CO2 CTLL-2 cell clones
permanently expressing wild-type and mutant HTLV-I Tax were established
by neomycin-selection after gene transfection as described below.
CTLL-2 cells (107) were resuspended in 0.7 ml of FCS-free
RPMI containing 10 µg of wild-type or mutant Tax expression plasmids
and electroporated by use of a Gene Pulser (Bio-Rad, Hercules, Calif.)
at 320 V and 950 µF. Then, the cells were resuspended in 20 ml of
RPMI-10% FCS and 1 nM hrIL-2. After 48 h, the cells were
selected in 24-well plates in G418-containing medium (0.4 mg/ml) for 3 weeks. Wells were screened for Tax expression by Western blot analysis,
and cells in the wells positive for Tax were further cloned by the limiting-dilution method. In this study, we used two or three randomly
selected clones for each group of CTLL-2/Tax transfectants. We also
used an IL-2-independent T-cell line, Jurkat, which originated from
human acute lymphocytic leukemia (38).
Western blot analysis.
Expressions of HTLV-1 Tax,
Bcl-xL, and
-tubulin in CTLL-2 cell clones were analyzed
by Western blot assays as described previously (23).
Briefly, cell lysates prepared from CTLL-2 (5 × 106
cells) were subjected to electrophoresis under reduced conditions on a
discontinuous 12.5% polyacrylamide gel with sodium dodecyl sulfate,
and the proteins in the gel were transferred to polyvinylidene difluoride membranes. The blots were first incubated with a human serum
containing anti-Tax antibodies, rabbit antiserum specific for
Bcl-xL (Transduction Laboratories, Lexington, Ky.), or
mouse monoclonal antibody to
-tubulin (Oncogene, Cambridge, Mass.), then rinsed, and finally incubated with second antibodies conjugated with horseradish peroxidase. Sites of antibody binding were visualized by using ECL Western blotting detection system (Amersham International Plc, Little Chalfont, Buckinghamshire, United Kingdom).
RPA.
We analyzed the levels of bcl-xl,
bcl-xs, bak, bax, bcl-2,
and bad gene mRNAs in CTLL-2 cells cultured with or without
IL-2 for 48 h by RNase protection assay (RPA) with the RPA II kit
(Ambion, Austin, Tex.) as described previously (24). Cells
were lysed in Isogen (Nippon Gene, Toyama, Japan) solution, and total
cellular RNA was extracted by separation over CHCl4 and
precipitation with isopropanol. The total RNA (20 µg) was hybridized
with a mixture of 32P-labeled antisense RNA probes (3 × 104 cpm) overnight at 42°C in a hybridization buffer
containing 80% formamide and then treated with RNase A/T1. The
resultant protected RNAs were separated on a 5% acrylamide gel with 8 M urea and visualized by autoradiography. As internal controls, the
mRNA levels of a ribosomal protein (L32) and
glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) were analyzed. RNA
probes used for this assay were synthesized by in vitro transcription
with templates included in an mAPO-2 multiprobe template set
(PharMingen, San Diego, Calif.).
Transient-transfection assay.
To evaluate the ability of Tax
to activate transcription of bcl-x, 106 Jurkat
cells were cotransfected by the DEAE-dextran method with 4 µg of a
reporter plasmid pGL2-3.2 or control WT-Luc, 1 µg of pSV-
-galactosidase containing the bacterial
-galactosidase gene driven by the simian virus 40 (SV40) promoter, and an effector plasmid
containing wild-type or mutant Tax at a 1:2 molar ratio with the
reporter plasmids. After 48 h of incubation, cells were harvested,
and Luc activity in the cellular lysates was measured with a
luminometer (Lumat; Berthold & Co.). All Luc assays were performed in
triplicates. At the same time, the activity of
-galactosidase in the
lysates was measured as described previously (37). Luc activity was normalized with
-galactosidase activity.
EMSA.
Binding activity of NF-
B proteins to NF-
B
elements was examined by electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA) as
described previously (23). In brief, 10 µg of nuclear
extracts prepared from 107 of CTLL-2/Tax transfectants
cultured with or without IL-2 for 48 h were preincubated with a
binding buffer containing 1 µg of poly(dI-dC). They were then
incubated with approximately 20,000 cpm of 32P-labeled
oligonucleotide probes containing NF-
B like elements for 20 min at
room temperature. The DNA-protein complex was separated on a 5%
polyacrylamide gel and visualized by autoradiography. To examine the
specificity of the NF-
B-like element of the probes, unlabeled
competitor oligonucleotides were preincubated with nuclear extracts for
20 min on ice prior to incubation with probes. The probes or
competitors utilized were prepared by annealing the sense and antisense
synthetic oligonucleotides as follows: NF-
B-like element in the
bcl-x promoter, 5'-cgatAAAGGGACTTCCAAGat-3' and 3'-taTTTCCCTGAAGGTTCtagc-5'; NF-
B-like mutant
element, 5'-cgatAAACCGACTTCCAAGat-3' and
3'-taTTTGGCTGAAGGTTCtagc-5'; typical NF-
B element
of SV40 early promoter, 5'-cgatAGAGGGGACTTTCCGat-3' and
3'-taTCTCCCCTGAAAGGCtagc-5'; and typical CRE sequence of
T-cell receptor
promoter, 5'-cgatCCATGACGTCATGGat-3' and
3'-taGGTACTGCAGTACCtagc-5'. (Lowercase letters signify
nonsense nucleotides inserted to make cohesive ends, which increases
the radiolabeling efficiency.) To identify NF-
B proteins in the
DNA-protein complex by EMSA, antibodies specific for various NF-
B
family proteins, including NF-
B p65, NF-
B p50, c-Rel, RelB, and
NF-
B p52 (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, Calif.), were used to elicit supershift and/or inhibition of the bands. These antibodies were incubated with the nuclear extracts for 1 h on ice prior to
incubation with radiolabeled probes in EMSA.
 |
RESULTS |
Constitutive expression of bcl-x mRNA and
Bcl-xL protein in CTLL-2 cells stably transfected with
HTLV-1 Tax.
We previously established CTLL-2 clones stably
transfected with various Tax plasmids such as wild-type Tax (WT),
mutant Tax retaining ability to activate NF-
B (703), or mutant Tax
deficient in activating the NF-
B site (M22) (23). By
using these clones, we demonstrated that CTLL-2 clones transfected with
WT Tax (CTLL-2/WT) and mutant Tax 703 (CTLL-2/703) but not the parental
CTLL-2 or CTLL-2 clones transfected with Tax M22 (CTLL-2/M22) or
control vector (CTLL-2/Vec) were resistant to apoptosis induced by IL-2 deprivation (23).
To dissect the molecular mechanisms of Tax-induced inhibition of
apoptosis in CTLL-2 cells, we determined the mRNA-levels of several
apoptosis-related genes, including bcl-xl,
bcl-xs, bak, bax, bcl-2,
and bad in CTLL-2/Tax transfectants, by using RNase
protection assays. A representative result is shown in Fig. 1A. In a clone of CTLL-2/Vec
(CTLL-2/Vec-#22), the mRNA level of bcl-xl, which is known
to inhibit apoptosis, was markedly decreased after 48 h of IL-2
deprivation. Expression of bak slightly decreased by IL-2
deprivation, but none of the other members of the bcl family tested was
significantly affected by IL-2 deprivation. Bcl-xs mRNA, a
spliced variant of bcl-xl (19), was not detected in any of these CTLL-2 cells regardless of the presence of IL-2. In
contrast, clones of CTLL-2/WT and CTLL-2/703 (CTLL-2/WT-#34 and
CTLL-2/703-#23, respectively) showed a constitutive expression of
bcl-xl even in the absence of IL-2. However, the induction of bcl-xl mRNA in a CTLL-2/M22 clone (CTLL-2/M22-#23) was
dependent on the presence of IL-2. Similar results were obtained by
using another set of independent clones of CTLL-2/Tax transfectants.

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FIG. 1.
Constitutive expression of bcl-xl mRNA and
Bcl-xL protein in CTLL-2/Tax transfectants in the absence
of IL-2. (A) RNase protection assays with specific probes for
bcl-xl, bcl-xs, bak, bax,
bcl-2, and bad genes were performed by using 20 µg of total RNA samples extracted from CTLL-2/Vec-#22 (lanes 1 and
2), CTLL-2/WT-#34 (lanes 3 and 4), CTLL-2/703-#23 (lanes 5 and 6), and
CTLL-2/M22-#23 (lanes 7 and 8) after 48 h of culture in the
presence (lanes 1, 3, 5, and 7) or absence (lanes 2, 4, 6, and 8) of 1 nM IL-2. Similar results were obtained with another set of independent
clones. (B) Western blot analysis of Bcl-xL (top) and
-tubulin (bottom) expression in CTLL-2/Tax transfectants. In each
lane, we used 50 µg of total cell lysates prepared from a similar set
of CTLL-2 clones as described in panel A. The arrangement of lanes is
similar to that of panel A. Specific protein bands are indicated by
arrows. Similar results were obtained with another set of independent
clones.
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Constitutive expression of the Bcl-xL protein in stable
CTLL-2 transfectants with Tax was also confirmed by Western blot
analysis. As shown in Fig. 1B, CTLL-2/WT-#34 and CTLL-2/703-#23 but not CTLL-2/Vec or CTLL-2/M22-#23 expressed detectable levels of
Bcl-xL protein after 48 h of IL-2 deprivation. The
levels of
-tubulin, a cytoskeletal protein as an internal control,
was comparable among these clones. The protein levels of Bak in
CTLL-2/WT clones did not differ from those of CTLL-2/Vec clones in the
absence of IL-2 (data not shown). These results suggested that the
constitutive expression of Bcl-xL in CTLL-2/WT and
CTLL-2/703 clones in the absence of IL-2 may contribute to Tax-induced
resistance to apoptosis. We then explored the mechanisms of
Bcl-xL induction by HTLV-1 Tax.
Transactivation of bcl-x promoter by HTLV-1 Tax.
Using transient-transfection assays, we then assessed whether Tax can
enhance bcl-x promoter activity. In these assays,
HTLV-1-negative IL-2-independent human T-cell line Jurkat but not
CTLL-2 cells were used since CTLL-2 cells cannot survive in the absence
of IL-2 after transfection with plasmids. Jurkat cells were
cotransfected with Tax effector plasmids and a Luc reporter plasmid
(pGL2-3.2) containing a 3.2-kbp segment of 5' flanking region of the
mouse bcl-x gene in the absence of IL-2 (19). As
shown in Fig. 2, the Luc activities of
Jurkat cells transfected with WT Tax or Tax 703 were seven to nine
times higher than those of cells transfected with the control vector.
However, Luc activity in cells transfected with Tax M22 plasmid was
almost equivalent to that in control cells. These results indicated
that both WT Tax and Tax 703 transactivates bcl-x promoter
activity, presumably through the NF-
B pathway.

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FIG. 2.
Transactivation of bcl-x promoter by Tax.
Jurkat cells (106) were cotransfected with 2 µg of the
Luc reporter plasmid pGL2-3.2 driven by the bcl-x promoter,
1 µg of pSV- -galactosidase, and 2 µg of Tax-expressing plasmids
or its control vector pH APr-1-neo ( A). The Tax-expressing
plasmids utilized were p MT-2Tax (WT), p Tax703 (703), and
p TaxM22 (M22). Luciferase activities were normalized with
-galactosidase activity. Data represent the mean ± the
standard deviation (SD) of three independent experiments.
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|
Mapping of HTLV-1 Tax-responsive regions in the bcl-x
promoter.
We next mapped Tax-responsive elements in the mouse
bcl-x promoter. Several consensus motifs for the binding of
transcription factors such as SP-1, Ets-1, and GATA-1 have been
identified (19). We also identified an NF-
B binding motif
(GGGACTTCC) similar to the one in the immunoglobulin
promoter, which was located at positions
848 to
840 of the
bcl-x promoter in an inverted direction. To examine the
contributions of these sites for Tax-induced transactivation, a series
of Luc reporter constructs with several fragments of different lengths
of 5' deleted bcl-x promoters were prepared and transiently
transfected into Jurkat cells along with Tax expression plasmid or
control plasmid (Fig. 3). The highest
level of Tax-induced Luc activity was observed in cells transfected
with the longest construct, pGL2-3.2. The two deletion constructs,
pGL2(1160) and pGL2(848), also responded to Tax significantly. All
three constructs contained both SP-1 and NF-
B binding site-like
elements. However, the Tax-induced Luc activity was markedly reduced in
cells transfected with pGL2(822), which had the SP-1 but not the
NF-
B site. The shortest construct pGL2(631), which lacked both the
NF-
B and the SP-1 sites, elicited minimal responses to Tax.
Furthermore, a mutated NF-
B-Luc plasmid, pGL
BM, which had the
same length as pGL2(848) but had a CC-to-GG mutation at positions
841
and
840 within the NF-
B motif, exhibited markedly reduced levels of Tax-induced transactivation as observed with pGL2(822). These results suggest that the NF-
B site located at positions
848 to
840 in the bcl-x gene promoter region is one of the major responsive elements of Tax-induced transactivation of bcl-x.

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FIG. 3.
Mapping of HTLV-1 Tax-responsive region in the
bcl-x promoter. A series of Luc reporter plasmids based on
pGL2 vectors containing fragments of 5' flanking region of the
bcl-x gene were cotransfected into Jurkat cells with WT Tax
plasmid p MT-2Tax (solid bars) or its control plasmid (open bars),
together with reference plasmid pSV- -galactosidase. Luciferase
activities normalized with -galactosidase activities after 48 h
of incubation are indicated. Constructs of the reporter plasmids
utilized are schematically illustrated in the left panel. Fragments of
the 5' flanking region of bcl-x gene are represented by
heavy lines, and the number at the 5' end of each construct indicate
the 5'-most end base positions from the translation initiation codon of
the bcl-x gene. The locations of the binding sites for
transcription factors NF- B ( ),
SP-1 ( ), Ets-1 ( ) and GATA-1
( ), identified by using a transcription factor database
(1a), are also indicated. pGL2 BM contained mutations
within the NF- B site
( )
as described in Materials and Methods. Similar results were obtained in
two independent experiments.
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Binding of NF-
B family proteins to the NF-
B-like element in
bcl-x promoter.
We further examined whether NF-
B
family proteins can actually bind to the putative NF-
B element
identified in the bcl-x promoter by EMSA. The synthetic
oligonucleotide containing the NF-
B-site at positions of
848 to
840 in the bcl-x promoter was used as a probe. As shown in
Fig. 4A, a clear shifted band was
observed when the probes were incubated with nuclear extracts of
CTLL-2/WT-#34 cultured in the presence or the absence of IL-2. However,
the binding activity of nuclear extracts of CTLL-2/Vec-#22 was
dependent on the presence of IL-2. Similar results were observed with
parental CTLL-2 cells (data not shown). Complex formation was competed
by 100-fold excess cold probe or unlabeled oligonucleotides with a
typical NF-
B consensus sequence of SV40 early promoter but not by
oligonucleotides with a mutant NF-
B-like sequence of the
bcl-x promoter or other unrelated competitors such as CRE sequence. When the mutant NF-
B-like sequence was used as a probe, complex formation was not observed with nuclear extracts from CTLL-2/WT-#34 cultured in the absence of IL-2. When anti-NF-
B p50
antibody was preincubated with nuclear factors of CTLL-2/WT-#34, the
bands formed with the probes supershifted in the EMSA, whereas anti-NF-
B p65 and anti-RelB partially inhibited the complex
formation (Fig. 4B). A similar pattern of supershift was also observed
when a typical NF-
B consensus sequence was used as a probe (data not shown). These results indicated that p65 and p50 subunits of NF-
B and RelB can bind the NF-
B like element identified in the
bcl-x promoter.

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FIG. 4.
Binding of NF- B family proteins to
32P-labeled oligonucleotide probes in EMSA. (A) Nuclear
extracts (10 µg) from CTLL-2/Vec-#22 (lanes 2 and 3) and CTLL-2/WT
(lanes 4 to 9) cultured in the presence (lanes 2 and 9) or absence
(lanes 3 to 8) of IL-2 were incubated with (lanes 5 to 8) or without
(lanes 2 to 4 and 9) a 100-fold excess of competitors and then
incubated with probes containing the NF- B-like element in the
bcl-x promoter. The DNA-protein complexes were separated on
a 5% polyacrylamide gel and visualized by autoradiography. Competitors
used included unlabeled probe (lane 5), mutant NF- B like element
(lane 6), a typical NF- B sequence (lane 7), and a typical CRE
sequence (lane 8). Lane 1 represents the band of probes alone.
Radiolabeled probes containing a mutant NF- B-like element were also
incubated without (lane 10) or with (lane 11) nuclear extracts from
CTLL-2/WT cultured in the absence of IL-2. Specific bands are indicated
by arrows. (B) Nuclear extracts (10 µg) from IL-2-untreated CTLL-2/WT
were preincubated without (lane 1) or with antibodies specific for
NF- B family proteins, including NF- B p65 (lane 2), NF- B p50
(lane 3), c-Rel (lane 4), RelB (lane 5), NF- B p52 (lane 6), and
control rabbit antiserum (lane 7), and then incubated with radiolabeled
probe containing the NF- B-like element in the bcl-x
promoter. The lower arrow indicates NF- B-DNA complex alone, while
the upper arrow indicates a supershifted band with an anti-NF- B p50
antibody. Similar results were obtained with at least three independent
CTLL-2/WT clones.
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Suppression of Tax-induced enhancement of bcl-x
promoter activity by blocking NF-
B pathway.
We then examined
whether blocking of the NF-
B pathway can affect Tax-induced
transactivation of bcl-xl by transient assays by using a
super-repressor form of I
B
mutant (I
B
M) that specifically suppresses NF-
B activity. I
B
M contains serine to alanine
mutations at residues 32 and 36, which abolish phosphorylation sites by I
B kinase. The I
B
M expression vector was cotransfected into Jurkat cells along with the WT Tax plasmid and the pGL2-3.2. As shown
in Fig. 5A, the elevated Luc activity in
response to WT Tax was markedly suppressed by cotransfection with
I
B
M but not with the control plasmid. In contrast, the Luc
activity of another Luc reporter plasmid, WT-Luc, which can be
activated by Tax through the CRE pathway but not through the NF-
B
pathway (16), was not affected by I
B
M (Fig. 5B).
These results confirmed that the NF-
B pathway was involved
in Tax-induced transactivation of the bcl-x promoter in
these cells.

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FIG. 5.
Involvement of NF- B pathway in Tax-induced
transactivation of bcl-x promoter. (A) Jurkat cells were
cotransfected with 4 µg of bcl-xl promoter-Luc reporter
plasmid pGL2-3.2, 1 µg of pSV- -galactosidase, and various
combinations of 2 µg of p MT-2Tax and 2 µg of pcDNA3-I B M as
indicated. The total plasmid amount for transfection was always
adjusted up to 9 µg by adding control plasmids pH APr-1-neo or
pcDNA3. The Luc activity of the samples after 48 h of incubation
was normalized to the -galactosidase activity. Data represent the
mean ± the SD of three independent experiments. (B) Control
experiments with reporter plasmids without potential NF- B binding
sites. Jurkat cells were transfected with 4 µg of HTLV-LTR (21 bp)-Luc reporter plasmid WT-Luc, 2 µg of p MT-2Tax, 1 µg of
pSV- -galactosidase, and 2 µg of pcDNA3-I B M or pcDNA3. The
luciferase activity was indicated as described in panel A.
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Involvement of NF-
B pathway in constitutive bcl-xl
promoter activity in CTLL-2/Tax transfectants.
Finally, we
examined involvement of the NF-
B pathway in Tax-induced constitutive
expression of bcl-xl in CTLL-2 cells. CTLL-2/WT-#34 were
transfected with the pGL2-3.2 in the presence or absence of I
B
M
in IL-2-free conditions. As shown in Fig.
6A, the bcl-x promoter
activity in CTLL-2/WT-#34 was partially inhibited by transfection with
I
B
M but not with control plasmid. The Luc activity of WT-Luc
lacking potential NF-
B sites was not affected by I
B
M in these
cells (Fig. 6B). Similar results were obtained with at least three
independent CTLL-2/WT clones. These results confirmed the involvement
of the NF-
B pathway in Tax-induced transactivation of
bcl-xl in CTLL-2 cells, as well as in Jurkat cells.

View larger version (14K):
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|
FIG. 6.
Inhibition of constitutive activation of
bcl-xl promoter in CTLL-2/Tax transfectants by I B M.
(A) CTLL-2/WT clone cells were transfected with pGL2-3.2,
pSV- -galactosidase, and either pcDNA3-I B M (solid bar) or
pcDNA3 (open bar). Luc activity after 48 h of incubation in the
absence of IL-2 was normalized to -galactosidase activity and
indicated as the percentage of activity in the I B M( ) sample.
Data represent the mean ± the SD of three independent
experiments. (B) Control experiments with the WT-Luc reporter plasmid
instead of pGL2-3.2.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
In this study, we demonstrated that HTLV-1 Tax transactivates the
bcl-x promoter through NF-
B. Tax-mediated constitutive expression of Bcl-xL in CTLL-2 cells expressing Tax is
presumed to prevent these cells from apoptosis induced by IL-2
deprivation. This can be one of the molecular mechanisms of apoptosis
resistance shown in our previous study, which demonstrated that Tax
converted IL-2-dependent growth of CTLL-2 to IL-2-independent growth
(23).
RNA protection assays showed that bcl-xl, but not other
members of bcl family tested, was constitutively expressed
in CTLL-2/WT and CTLL-2/703 clones in the absence of IL-2 (Fig. 3A).
Constitutive expression of Bcl-xL protein was also observed
in these cells (Fig. 3B). Bcl-xL has been shown to inhibit
apoptosis of several types of cells including T lymphocytes (4,
32), and overexpression of Bcl-xL protects CTLL-2
cells against apoptosis after IL-2 deprivation (3).
Therefore, Tax-induced constitutive expression of Bcl-xL can be the underlying molecular mechanism of resistance of CTLL-2 cells
expressing Tax to apoptosis after IL-2 deprivation. Other investigators, however, reported that the otherwise IL-3-dependent B
cells could grow independently of IL-3 when they expressed both Tax and
c-Myc but not Tax or c-Myc alone (28). bcl-xl
induction by Tax was not observed in these cells. Such variation in the ability of Tax to induce bcl-xl among different cell types
implies a requirement of cellular mediators in this phenomenon.
Although Bcl-2 is also known to protect cells against apoptosis
(10, 11), the expression of bcl-2 did not
correlate with Tax-induced resistance to apoptosis of CTLL-2 in the
present system. This finding is consistent with that of previous
reports demonstrating that Tax did not induce bcl-2
expression in human endothelial cells and a pro-B cell line (28,
31). Expression of bax, an accelerator of apoptosis,
was not significantly affected by Tax in the present study. However,
other investigators reported that Tax repressed bax
transcription (5). In general, the Bcl-2/Bax and
Bcl-xL/Bax ratios are thought to be important determinants of apoptosis (35). Our results of Tax-induced activation of bcl-xl, together with the finding of Tax-induced repression
of bax by others, suggest that Tax inhibits apoptosis by
increasing the Bcl-xL/Bax ratio in HTLV-1-infected cells.
Tax is known to activate NF-
B by activating I
B kinases and other
related molecules (8, 17, 47, 54). Involvement of the
NF-
B pathway in Tax-induced transactivation of bcl-xl was
strongly suggested by our results that the bcl-x promoter was activated by mutant Tax preferentially activating NF-
B (Fig. 3)
and that an NF-
B-like element at positions
848 to
840 from the
translation initiation codon of bcl-x gene was responsive for Tax-induced activation of the bcl-x promoter (Fig. 4).
The binding of NF-
B family proteins, including NF-
B p65, NF-
B
p50, and RelB, to the NF-
B-like element that we identified in the mouse bcl-x promoter was also confirmed in in vitro (Fig.
4B). Similar NF-
B binding sequences were also found in the human
bcl-x promoter (12). Furthermore, the
Tax-mediated bcl-x promoter activation was profoundly
inhibited by a super-repressor mutant of I
B
(Fig. 5 and 6) or by
introduction of mutations in the NF-
B-like element in the mouse
bcl-x promoter constructs. These findings suggest that the
NF-
B-like element is one of the major responsive regions of
Tax-induced bcl-x promoter activation.
NF-
B activation is known to inhibit apoptosis induced by tumor
necrosis factor alpha or immunoglobulin G cross-linking in several
types of cells unrelated to HTLV-1 (48, 49, 51). A few
reports suggested the involvement of inhibitor of apoptosis protein
(50) and IEX-1L (52), although these
could be a part of multiple mechanisms and may also vary among
different cell types. The molecular mechanisms of NF-
B-induced
inhibition of apoptosis, apart from the bcl-xl induction
demonstrated in the present study, remain to be clarified.
In conclusion, we demonstrated in the present study that Tax enhanced
the expression of Bcl-xL at least through the NF-
B pathway, and that this was associated with cellular resistance to
apoptosis. Tax-mediated Bcl-xL induction may be one of the underlying mechanisms of inhibition of apoptosis of HTLV-1 infected cells, which might contribute to the pathogenesis of HTLV-1 infection.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank K. Matumoto (Osaka Red Cross Center, Osaka, Japan); J. Fujisawa (Kansai Medical University, Osaka, Japan); and J. Inoue
(Tokyo University, Tokyo, Japan) for providing pH
APr-1-neo; p
MT-2Tax, p
Tax703, p
TaxM22, and WT-Luc; and
I
B
M, respectively. We also thank F. G. Issa, Word-Medex,
Sydney, Australia, for the careful reading and editing of the manuscript.
This work was supported in part by grants from the Agency of Science
and Technology of Japan, and Core Research for Evolutional Science and
Technology of Japan Science and Technology Corporation.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Immunotherapeutics, Tokyo Medical and Dental University, Medical
Research Division, 1-5-45 Yushima, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113, Japan. Phone: 81 (3) 5803-5798. Fax: 81 (3) 5803-0235. E-mail:
kann.impt{at}med.tmd.ac.jp.
 |
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Journal of Virology, October 1999, p. 7981-7987, Vol. 73, No. 10
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Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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