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EZH2 phosphorylation regulates Tat‐induced HIV‐1 transactivation via ROS/Akt signaling pathway
20
Citations
20
References
2015
Year
Signal TransductionSignaling PathwayHiv-1 TransactivationHuman RetrovirusImmunologyAntiviral ResponseResistance Mutation (Virology)EpigeneticsEzh2 ActivityViral OncologyHivChronic Viral InfectionMedicineCell BiologyCell SignalingAids PathogenesisHiv-1 Latency
EZH2 plays a major role in HIV-1 latency, however, the molecular linkage between Tat-induced HIV-1 transactivation and EZH2 activity is not fully understood. It was shown Tat induced HIV-1 transactivation through inhibiting EZH2 activity. Tat decreased the levels of H3K27me3 and EZH2 occupy at the long terminal repeat (LTR) of HIV-1. We further showed for the first time that transfected with Tat construct resulted in an increase in phosphorylated EZH2 (p-EZH2), mediated by active Akt. ROS/Akt-dependent p-EZH2 was correlated with Tat-induced transactivation. Our study reveals that novel mechanisms allow Tat-induced HIV-1 transactivation by ROS/Akt-dependent downregulating the EZH2 epigenetic silencing machinery.
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