Differentiation-dependent chromatin rearrangement coincides with activation of human papillomavirus type 31 late gene expression

被引:49
作者
Peña, LD [1 ]
Laimins, LA [1 ]
机构
[1] Northwestern Univ, Sch Med, Dept Microbiol Immunol, Chicago, IL 60611 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1128/JVI.75.20.10005-10013.2001
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
The life cycle of human papillomaviruses (HPVs) is tightly linked to the differentiation status of the host cell. While early genes are expressed during the initial stages of viral infection, late gene expression occurs in the suprabasal layers of the cervical epithelium. Late genes encode E1<^>E4, a cytosolic protein, and capsid proteins L1 and L2. We have mapped over 30 initiation sites for late transcripts and show that the transcripts initiate in a 200-nucleotide region within the E7 open reading frame. The mechanisms regulating the activation of late gene expression, however, are not yet understood. DNase I hypersensitivity analysis of HPV-31 chromatin in cell lines that maintain viral genomes extrachromosomally indicates that a major shift in nuclease digestion occurs upon differentiation. In undifferentiated cells, hypersensitive regions exist in the upstream regulatory region proximal to the E6 open reading frame. Upon differentiation, a region between nucleotides 659 and 811 in the E7 open reading frame becomes accessible to DNase I. These results indicate that the late transcript initiation region becomes accessible to transcription factor binding upon differentiation. Several complexes mediate chromatin rearrangement, and we tested whether histone acetylation was sufficient for late transcript activation. Treatment with the histone deacetylase inhibitor trichostatin A was found to be insufficient to activate late gene expression in undifferentiated cells. However, it did activate expression of early transcripts. These results suggest that chromatin remodeling around the late promoter occurs upon epithelial differentiation and that mechanisms in addition to histone deacetylation contribute to activation of late gene expression.
引用
收藏
页码:10005 / 10013
页数:9
相关论文
共 65 条
[1]   CBP/p300 histone acetyl-transferase activity is important for the G1/S transition [J].
Ait-Si-Ali, S ;
Polesskaya, A ;
Filleur, S ;
Ferreira, R ;
Duquet, A ;
Robin, P ;
Vervish, A ;
Trouche, D ;
Cabon, F ;
Harel-Bellan, A .
ONCOGENE, 2000, 19 (20) :2430-2437
[2]   In vitro chromatin remodelling by chromatin accessibility complex (CHRAC) at the SV40 origin of DNA replication [J].
Alexiadis, V ;
Varga-Weisz, PD ;
Bonte, E ;
Becker, PB ;
Gruss, C .
EMBO JOURNAL, 1998, 17 (12) :3428-3438
[3]   STRUCTURAL AND TRANSCRIPTIONAL ANALYSIS OF HUMAN PAPILLOMAVIRUS TYPE-16 SEQUENCES IN CERVICAL-CARCINOMA CELL-LINES [J].
BAKER, CC ;
PHELPS, WC ;
LINDGREN, V ;
BRAUN, MJ ;
GONDA, MA ;
HOWLEY, PM .
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 1987, 61 (04) :962-971
[4]   DIFFERENTIAL PROMOTER UTILIZATION BY THE BOVINE PAPILLOMAVIRUS IN TRANSFORMED-CELLS AND PRODUCTIVELY INFECTED WART TISSUES [J].
BAKER, CC ;
HOWLEY, PM .
EMBO JOURNAL, 1987, 6 (04) :1027-1035
[5]   TISSUE-SPECIFIC DNASEI HYPERSENSITIVE SITES IN THE 5'-FLANKING SEQUENCES OF THE TRYPTOPHAN OXYGENASE AND THE TYROSINE AMINOTRANSFERASE GENES [J].
BECKER, P ;
RENKAWITZ, R ;
SCHUTZ, G .
EMBO JOURNAL, 1984, 3 (09) :2015-2020
[6]   IDENTIFICATION OF HUMAN PAPILLOMAVIRUS TYPE-18 TRANSFORMING GENES IN IMMORTALIZED AND PRIMARY-CELLS [J].
BEDELL, MA ;
JONES, KH ;
GROSSMAN, SR ;
LAIMINS, LA .
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 1989, 63 (03) :1247-1255
[7]   AMPLIFICATION OF HUMAN PAPILLOMAVIRUS GENOMES INVITRO IS DEPENDENT ON EPITHELIAL DIFFERENTIATION [J].
BEDELL, MA ;
HUDSON, JB ;
GOLUB, TR ;
TURYK, ME ;
HOSKEN, M ;
WILBANKS, GD ;
LAIMINS, LA .
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 1991, 65 (05) :2254-2260
[8]   Gene regulation - Local or global? [J].
Berger, SL .
NATURE, 2000, 408 (6811) :412-415
[9]   MAJOR CHANGES IN THE 5' AND 3' CHROMATIN STRUCTURE OF SEA-URCHIN HISTONE GENES ACCOMPANY THEIR ACTIVATION AND INACTIVATION IN DEVELOPMENT [J].
BRYAN, PN ;
OLAH, J ;
BIRNSTIEL, ML .
CELL, 1983, 33 (03) :843-848
[10]  
CAREY M, 2000, TRANSCRIPTIONAL REGU