Publication | Open Access
Adenovirus E4orf4 protein reduces phosphorylation of c-Fos and E1A proteins while simultaneously reducing the level of AP-1
102
Citations
89
References
1992
Year
Molecular BiologyViral OncologyTranscriptional RegulationAdenovirus E4orf4 ProteinVirus GeneCell SignalingViral GeneticsAdenovirus E1a ProteinCyclic AmpGene ExpressionCell BiologyProtein PhosphorylationSignal TransductionMolecular VirologyNatural SciencesE1a ProteinsCellular BiochemistrySystems BiologyMedicineCyclic Amp Cooperate
Adenovirus E1A protein and cyclic AMP cooperate to induce transcription factor AP-1 and viral gene expression in mouse S49 cells. We report that a protein encoded within the viral E4 gene region acts to counterbalance the induction of AP-1 DNA-binding activity by E1A and cyclic AMP. Studies with mutant adenoviruses demonstrated that in the absence of E4orf4 protein, AP-1 DNA-binding activity is induced to substantially higher levels than in wild-type virus-infected cells. The induction is the result of increased production of JunB and c-Fos proteins. Hyperphosphorylated forms of c-Fos and E1A proteins accumulate in the absence of functional E4orf4 protein. We propose that the E4orf4 protein acts to inhibit the activity of a cellular kinase that phosphorylates both the E1A and c-Fos proteins. Phosphorylation-dependent alterations in the activity of c-Fos, E1A, or some unidentified protein might, then, lead to decreased synthesis of AP-1 components. This E4 function likely plays an important role in natural infections, since a mutant virus unable to express the E4orf4 protein is considerably more cytotoxic than the wild-type virus.
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