Abstract
Potent induction of the gene coding for human prointerleukin 1β (il1b) normally requires a far-upstream inducible enhancer in addition to a minimal promoter located between positions −131 and +12. The transcription factor Spi-1 (also called PU.1) is necessary for expression and binds to the minimal promoter, thus providing an essential transcription activation domain (TAD). In contrast, infection by human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) can strongly activate il1bvia the expression of immediate early (IE) viral proteins and eliminates the requirement for the upstream enhancer. Spi-1 has been circumstantially implicated as a host factor in this process. We report here the molecular basis for the direct involvement of Spi-1 in HCMV activation of il1b. Transfection of Spi-1-deficient HeLa cells demonstrated both the requirement of Spi-1 for IE activity and the need for a shorter promoter (−59 to +12) than that required in the absence of IE proteins. Furthermore, in contrast to normal, enhancer-dependent il1b expression, which absolutely requires both the Spi-1 winged helix-turn-helix (wHTH) DNA-binding domain and the majority of the Spi-1 TAD, il1b expression in the presence of IE proteins does not require the Spi-1 TAD, which plays a synergistic role. In addition, we demonstrate that a single IE protein, IE2, is critical for the induction of il1b. Protein-protein interaction experiments revealed that the wing motif within the Spi-1 wHTH domain directly recruits IE2. In turn, IE2 physically associates with the Spi-1 wing and requires the integrity of at least one region of IE2. Functional analysis demonstrates that both this region and a carboxy-terminal acidic TAD are required for IE2 function. Therefore, we propose a protein-tethered transactivation mechanism in which the il1b promoter-bound Spi-1 wHTH tethers IE2, which provides a TAD, resulting in the transactivation of il1b.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We are deeply indepted to Deborah Spector and Chuck Clark for the cDNA wild-type and mutated IE expression constructs and informative discussions. We also thank James Alwine and Adam Geballe, who provided GST-IE constructs and genomic HCMV IE expression vectors, respectively. Richard Maki, Dan Tenen, and Jack Hensold kindly made additional constructs available. Deborah Galson and James Listman provided helpful discussions, and Changmin Chen is acknowledged for technical assistance.
This work was supported by NIH grant CA 68544.