NF-κB and p53 Are the Dominant Apoptosis-inducing Transcription Factors Elicited by the HIV-1 Envelope
Article 2004 en
Authors
JP
Jean‐Luc Perfettini
TR
Thomas Roumier
MC
Maria Castedo
Abstract
1 min read
The coculture of cells expressing the HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein complex (Env) with cells expressing CD4 results into cell fusion, deregulated mitosis, and subsequent cell death. Here, we show that NF-κB, p53, and AP1 are activated in Env-elicited apoptosis. The nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) super repressor had an antimitotic and antiapoptotic effect and prevented the Env-elicited phosphorylation of p53 on serine 15 and 46, as well as the activation of AP1. Transfection with dominant-negative p53 abolished apoptosis and AP1 activation. Signs of NF-κB and p53 activation were also detected in lymph node biopsies from HIV-1–infected individuals. Microarrays revealed that most (85%) of the transcriptional effects of HIV-1 Env were blocked by the p53 inhibitor pifithrin-α. Macroarrays led to the identification of several Env-elicited, p53-dependent proapoptotic transcripts, in particular Puma, a proapoptotic “BH3-only” protein from the Bcl-2 family known to activate Bax/Bak. Down modulation of Puma by antisense oligonucleotides, as well as RNA interference of Bax and Bak, prevented Env-induced apoptosis. HIV-1–infected primary lymphoblasts up-regulated Puma in vitro. Moreover, circulating CD4+ lymphocytes from untreated, HIV-1–infected donors contained enhanced amounts of Puma protein, and these elevated Puma levels dropped upon antiretroviral therapy. Altogether, these data indicate that NF-κB and p53 cooperate as the dominant proapoptotic transcription factors participating in HIV-1 infection.
Maria Castedo, Karine F. Ferri, Julià Blanco, Thomas Roumier, Nathanaël Larochette, Jordi Barretina, Alessandra Amendola, Roberta Nardacci, Didier Métivier, José A. Esté, Mauro Piacentini, Guido Guido Kroemer
Karine F. Ferri, E. Jacotot, Julià Blanco, José A. Esté, Naoufal Zamzami, Santos A. Susín, Zhihua Xie, Greg Brothers, John C. Reed, Josef Penninger, Guido Guido Kroemer
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.