Inducible transcriptional activation of the human immunodeficiency virus long terminal repeat by protein kinase inhibitors.

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The protein kinase inhibitor 2-aminopurine (2-AP) greatly stimulated expression in human promonocytes-macrophages of plasmid constructs carrying various reporter genes (chloramphenicol acetyltransferase, lacZ, firefly luciferase [luc], and Salmonella typhimurium histidinol dehydrogenase [his]) driven by the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) long terminal repeat. Adenine, adenosine, and caffeine were also effective inducers, but other purine or pyrimidine derivatives were ineffective. Experiments with mutant derivatives of the HIV-1 long terminal repeat revealed no specific eukaryotic promoter elements necessary for 2-AP induction but indicated the need for some minimum combination of such elements. Induction of HIV-1-directed gene expression appeared not to require action of the transcription factor NF-kappa B. The mechanism of induction was investigated by using the luc and his genes linked to the HIV-1 long terminal repeat. 2-AP induced marked, steady rises in mRNA accumulation from both transfected and chromosomally integrated HIV-1 constructs but no increases from an endogenous gene encoding gamma-actin or glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase. Thus, induction is selective and not an artifact induced by transfecting DNA into cells. In run-on transcription experiments, the rates of transcription initiation of both transfected and integrated copies of the his gene increased about sixfold in cells treated with 2-AP. Thus, while increased initiation accounted for a portion of 2-AP induction, it could not cause the far greater increase in steady-state mRNA levels. 2-AP induction did not change mRNA decay rates and differed from the phorbol ester (phorbol myristate acetate)-induced activation of the protein kinase C-NF-kappa B pathway in its time course and in its requirement for new protein synthesis. Gel retardation assays showed that unlike phorbol myristate acetate induction, 2-AP induction is enhancer independent. Whereas many previous studies have implicated the activation of various protein kinases in gene induction, we here describe a mechanism of gene activation that appears to involve protein kinase inhibition as a component of the induction response.

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