IE1 and IE3 mRNAs and their protein products (IE110 and IE175, respectively) were detected in HSV-1-infected U937 cells at 4-15 hours postinfection. In transient expression assays with infectious HIV or an HIV-LTR-directed chloramphenicol acetyltransferase construction (HIV-LTRcat), HSV-1 caused HIV activation (86.7% +/- 6.4% conversion). Electrophoretic mobility shift assays with DNA sequences that encompass the LBP-1 binding site revealed increased levels of DNA-protein complex formation with nuclear extracts from HSV-1 infected as compared with uninfected U937 cells. Novel bands were not seen. HSV-1 mutants respectively deleted in IE110 (dl1403) or IE175 (d120) activated HIV as well as wild-type virus. However, HSV-1-mediated activation was inhibited (26% conversion) by simultaneous treatment with oligonucleoside methylphosphonates (ONMP) that specifically inhibit expression of IE110 (IE1TI) or IE175 (IE3TI). ONMP did not inhibit activation when used individually (83.8% and 67.8% conversion with IETI1 and IE3TI, respectively). Combinations of mutant ONMP that do not inhibit IE110 or IE175 expression did not reduce the levels of HSV-1-mediated activation. These findings suggest that HSV genes IE1 and IE3 can independently activate HIV in monocytic cells and ONMP that target HSV IE genes can be used to inhibit HIV activation.
Molecular interactions between herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) were investigated in the promonocytic cell line U937. HSV-l-mediated activation was observed in transient expression assays with hybrid constructions containing the HIV long terminal repeat (LTR)-directed chloramphenicol aeetyltransferase gene. Comparison of constructions that differ in the GGTCA palindrome located within the negative regulatory region of the LTR revealed four-to eightfold lower activation levels for the wild-type as compared to the mutant sequence. Three protein species, 37K, 59K/64K and 75K, that bind to the wild-type GGTCA palindrome were resolved in nuclear extracts of uninfected U937 cells by gel retardation and u.v.-crosslinking experiments. The 37K protein did not bind to the mutant palindrome sequence. However, a distinct 120K protein was detected. The 37K and 59K/64K binding proteins were not resolved in similar experiments performed with nuclear extracts from HSV-l-infected U937 cells but there was a novel p50 species that binds only to the wild-type palindrome sequence. These findings raise the possibility that interaction of these proteins at the GGTCA palindrome is involved in HSV-l-mediated regulation of the HIV LTR in U937 cells.
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