Potential Control of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1aspExpression by Alternative Splicing in the Upstream Untranslated Region
Autor: | Kate E Birch, Michael S. Barbagallo, Nicholas John Deacon, Jennifer Anne Mosse |
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Rok vydání: | 2012 |
Předmět: |
Gene Expression Regulation
Viral Untranslated region Biology Open Reading Frames Genes Reporter Untranslated Regions Transcription (biology) Genetics Humans Nucleotide Motifs Molecular Biology Gene Conserved Sequence Reporter gene Base Sequence Alternative splicing env Gene Products Human Immunodeficiency Virus Cell Biology General Medicine Molecular biology Long terminal repeat Alternative Splicing Open reading frame HEK293 Cells Regulatory sequence Mutation HIV-1 |
Zdroj: | DNA and Cell Biology. 31:1303-1313 |
ISSN: | 1557-7430 1044-5498 |
Popis: | The negative-sense asp open reading frame (ORF) positioned opposite to the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) env gene encodes the 189 amino acid, membrane-associated ASP protein. Negative-sense transcription, regulated by long terminal repeat sequences, has been observed early in HIV-1 infection in vitro. All subtypes of HIV-1 were scanned to detect the negative-sense asp ORF and to identify potential regulatory sequences. A series of highly conserved upstream short open reading frames (sORFs) was identified. This potential control region from HIV-1(NL4-3), containing six sORFs, was cloned upstream of the reporter gene EGFP. Expression by transfection of HEK293 cells indicated that the introduction of this sORF region inhibits EGFP reporter expression; analysis of transcripts revealed no significant changes in levels of EGFP mRNA. Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction analysis (RT-PCR) further demonstrated that the upstream sORF region undergoes alternative splicing in vitro. The most abundant product is spliced to remove sORFs I to V, leaving only the in-frame sORF VI upstream of asp. Sequence analysis revealed the presence of typical splice donor- and acceptor-site motifs. Mutation of the highly conserved splice donor and acceptor sites modulates, but does not fully relieve, inhibition of EGFP production. The strong conservation of asp and its sORFs across all HIV-1 subtypes suggests that the asp gene product may have a role in the pathogenesis of HIV-1. Alternative splicing of the upstream sORF region provides a potential mechanism for controlling expression of the asp gene. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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