Publication | Open Access
Human foamy virus genome possesses an internal, Bel-1-dependent and functional promoter.
150
Citations
25
References
1993
Year
Viral ReplicationGeneticsImmunologyMolecular BiologyVirus StructureTranscriptional RegulationFunctional PromoterVirus GeneHuman FoamyViral GeneticsHsrv ProvirusNeurovirologyVirologyGene ExpressionFunctional GenomicsHsrv TranscriptionMolecular VirologyNatural SciencesVirus GenomeSystems BiologyMedicine
The human foamy or spumaretrovirus (HSRV) is a complex retrovirus that encodes the three retroviral genes gag, pol, and env and, in addition, at least three bel genes. The HSRV Bel-1 protein was identified as a transcriptional trans-activator. HSRV transcription starts in the 5' long terminal repeat at a defined guanine residue. We report here that a second efficiently utilized start site of transcription is contained within a HSRV env DNA sequence upstream of the bel genes. Bel-specific transcripts that initiate at the internal transcriptional start site at nt 9196 were identified in HSRV-infected cells by primer extension and S1 nuclease analysis, and the intragenic promoter was shown to be constitutively activated by Bel-1 in the HSRV provirus. In transient expression assays with indicator gene constructs, expression by the HSRV intragenic promoter/enhancer is Bel-1 dependent. The data provide evidence for an intragenic start site of transcription in the genome of a complex, exogenous human retrovirus and are discussed in terms of a model for regulating spumaretroviral gene expression.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1