Histone H2A mono-ubiquitylation and p38-MAP Kinases regulate immediate-early gene-like reactivation of latent retrovirus HTLV-1
File(s)
Author(s)
Bangham, CRM
Taylor, Graham P
Klose, Robert J
Schofield, Christopher J
Kulkarni, Anurag
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
It is not understood how the human T cell leukemia virus human T-lymphotropic virus-1 (HTLV-1), a retrovirus, regulates the in vivo balance between transcriptional latency and reactivation. The HTLV-1 proviral plus-strand is typically transcriptionally silent in freshly isolated peripheral blood mononuclear cells from infected individuals, but after short-term ex vivo culture, there is a strong, spontaneous burst of proviral plus-strand transcription. Here, we demonstrate that proviral reactivation in freshly isolated, naturally infected primary CD4+ T cells has 3 key attributes characteristic of an immediate-early gene. Plus-strand transcription is p38-MAPK dependent and is not inhibited by protein synthesis inhibitors. Ubiquitylation of histone H2A (H2AK119ub1), a signature of polycomb repressive complex-1 (PRC1), is enriched at the latent HTLV-1 provirus, and immediate-early proviral reactivation is associated with rapid deubiquitylation of H2A at the provirus. Inhibition of deubiquitylation by the deubiquitinase (DUB) inhibitor PR619 reverses H2AK119ub1 depletion and strongly inhibits plus-strand transcription. We conclude that the HTLV-1 proviral plus-strand is regulated with characteristics of a cellular immediate-early gene, with a PRC1-dependent bivalent promoter sensitive to p38-MAPK signaling. Finally, we compare the epigenetic signatures of p38-MAPK inhibition, DUB inhibition, and glucose deprivation at the HTLV-1 provirus, and we show that these pathways act as independent checkpoints regulating proviral reactivation from latency.
Date Issued
2018-10-18
Date Acceptance
2018-08-30
Citation
Journal of Clinical Investigation, 2018, 3 (20)
ISSN
0021-9738
Publisher
American Society for Clinical Investigation
Journal / Book Title
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Volume
3
Issue
20
Copyright Statement
© 2018, American Society for Clinical Investigation. This work is licensed under
the Creative Commons Attribution
4.0 International License. To view
a copy of this license, visit http://
creativecommons.org/licenses/
by/4.0/.
the Creative Commons Attribution
4.0 International License. To view
a copy of this license, visit http://
creativecommons.org/licenses/
by/4.0/.
Sponsor
Wellcome Trust
Wellcome Trust
Grant Number
207477
207477/Z/17/Z
Subjects
Cell stress
Epigenetics
Transcription
Virology
Publication Status
Published
Article Number
e123196