Abstract: | Many cell signals such as CD28 and CD4 binding can costimulate cytokine gene expression in activated T cells. We have found that the human T leukemia/lymphotropic virus type 1 viral protein Tax can also strongly costimulate expression of interleukin-2 (IL-2), IL-3, and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) mRNA in T cells activated with the phorbol ester phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) and calcium ionophore, which can mimic activation through the antigen specific T-cell receptor. Reporter constructs also showed strong synergy between both stimuli and showed that Tax and the PMA-Ca2+ ionophore act through different regions of the IL-2 and GM-CSF genes. Furthermore, the Tax-responsive regions (TxRR) from both GM-CSF and IL-2 respond to costimulation through the CD28 surface receptor. The GM-CSF and IL-2 TxRRs showed significantly higher levels of NF-kappaB/rel binding, following induction by Tax, compared with that of the PMA-Ca2+ ionophore with only Tax capable of inducing c-Rel binding to a Consensus kappaB element within the GM-CSF TxRR. Tax protein mutants, however, showed that a pathway(s) other than NF-kappaB/rel induction could also cooperate with the PMA-Ca2+ ionophore to activate the GM-CSF and IL-2 genes. This high-level costimulation by Tax, through multiple pathways, may be important in the early stages of leukemia and in the nervous system disorder tropical spastic paraparesis. |