Abstract

AbstractHuman T-cell leukemia virus type-I (HTLV-I) is the etiologic agent of adult T-cell leukemia (ATL). This study examined the status of the oncogenic transcription factor AP-1 in leukemic cells freshly isolated from patients with ATL. Leukemic cells from peripheral blood of all patients with ATL exhibited constitutive AP-1 DNA binding activity, whereas mononuclear cells from normal individuals did not. In agreement with previous studies, HTLV-I transforming protein, Tax, was found to stimulate the DNA binding activity of AP-1 in a T-cell line. However, HTLV-I genes, including Tax, were not significantly expressed in leukemic cells freshly obtained from patients with ATL. Moreover, all T-cell lines derived from leukemic cells of patients with ATL also displayed constitutive AP-1 DNA binding activity, but expressed little Tax protein. Thus, leukemic cells of patients with ATL appear to have Tax-independent mechanisms that induce AP-1 activity, both in vivo and in vitro. In antibody supershift experiments, AP-1 in fresh leukemic cells and ATL-derived cell lines were found to contain JunD. Consistently, all primary ATL cells and ATL-derived cell lines expressed high levels of JunD messenger RNA. Our results suggest that AP-1 is activated in leukemic cells of patients with ATL through a Tax-independent mechanism and this may play a role in the deregulated phenotypes of ATL leukemic cells.

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