B Activation by the Human T-Cell Leukemia Virus Tax Oncoprotein
Institute for Microbiological Research J.-M. Wiame and Laboratory of Microbiology, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Brussels, Belgium,1 Faculté des Sciences Agronomiques de Gembloux, Gembloux, Belgium,2 Cancer Research and Clinical Investigation, Lilly Research Laboratories, Indianapolis, Indiana3
Received 29 April 2005/ Returned for modification 27 May 2005/ Accepted 15 September 2005
| ABSTRACT |
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B is critical for the induction of
cancer, including adult T-cell leukemia, which is linked to infection
by human T-cell leukemia virus type 1 and the expression of its
regulatory protein Tax. Although activation of the
NF-
B pathway by Tax involves its interaction with the
regulatory subunit of the I
B kinase (IKK) complex,
NEMO/IKK
, the mechanism by which Tax activates
specific cellular genes in the nucleus remains unknown. Here, we
demonstrate that the attachment of SUMO-1 to Tax regulates its
localization in nuclear bodies and the recruitment of both the RelA
subunit of NF-
B and free IKK
in these nuclear
structures. However, this sumoylation step is not sufficient for the
activation of the NF-
B pathway by Tax. This activity requires
the prior ubiquitination and colocalization of ubiquitinated Tax with
IKK complexes in the cytoplasm and the subsequent migration of the RelA
subunit of NF-
B to the nucleus. Thus, the ubiquitination and
sumoylation of Tax function in concert to result in the migration of
RelA to the nucleus and its accumulation with IKK
in nuclear
bodies for activation of gene expression. These modifications may
result in targets for the treatment of adult T-cell
leukemia. | INTRODUCTION |
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B pathway
(2,
38).
In
nonstimulated cells, inactive NF-
B complexes composed of p50
and RelA heterodimers are retained in the cytoplasm by NF-
B
inhibitors of the I
B family
(15,
23,
40). Tax activation of
the NF-
B pathway involves its interaction with the regulatory
subunit of the I
B kinase (IKK) complex, NEMO/IKK
,
leading to the activation of the two catalytic subunits, IKK
and IKKß (8,
14). Activation of the
I
B kinase complex by Tax determines the phosphorylation of the
I
B proteins, leading to their ubiquitination and degradation
by the proteasome and to the migration of the NF-
B complexes
to the nucleus (18,
45,
46). It also determines
the phosphorylation of the RelA subunit of NF-
B, a
prerequisite for activation of RelA and p50 heterodimers in the nucleus
(30). However, Tax also
colocalizes in discrete nuclear bodies (NB) with the two subunits of
NF-
B, p50 and RelA, in addition to RNA polymerase II, and the
assembly of these nuclear structures correlates with Tax
transcriptional activity
(4-6,
37). Thus, Tax-mediated
activation of gene expression may require the presence of Tax both in
the cytoplasm and in the nucleus
(3).
Ubiquitin
(Ub) and the small ubiquitin-like modifier (SUMO) are
polypeptides which are attached to the lysine residues of a number of
proteins via isopeptidic bonds, leading to the subsequent formation of
poly-ubiquitinated or poly-sumoylated branched molecules.
Ubiquitination and sumoylation often compete for the same lysine
residues and have opposite effects in regulating the function of a
variety of transcription factors by altering their intracellular
targeting, their interaction with specific partners, and/or their
stability (9,
22,
24,
27). Although
poly-ubiquitinated proteins are often targeted to the proteasome, SUMO
modification results in the targeting to subnuclear domains called
nuclear bodies, as was first observed for the promyelocytic leukemia
protein (PML) (27,
48). Activation of the
NF-
B pathway following genotoxic stress requires the
sequential sumoylation and nuclear targeting of IKK
, followed
by its ubiquitination, permitting IKK activation in the cytoplasm
(16).
Tax is
ubiquitinated on carboxy-terminal lysine residues, and this
modification is critical for Tax interaction with the proteasome
(7,
34). In this work, we
demonstrate that Tax is sumoylated and ubiquitinated on overlapping
lysine residues. These two modifications determine the partitioning of
Tax in the nuclear and cytoplasmic compartments. Colocalized Tax and
ubiquitin molecules were detected in the cytoplasm only, in association
with IKK complexes, and this modification plays a critical role in the
translocation of the RelA subunit of NF-
B to the nucleus.
However, the sumoylation of Tax and the subsequent formation of the Tax
nuclear bodies that contained both RelA and IKK
must also
occur for Tax-mediated activation of gene expression via the
NF-
B pathway. These results demonstrate that both the
sumoylation and the ubiquitination of Tax are critical for Tax-mediated
transcriptional activity.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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or
IKKß fused at their amino termini to the Flag epitope,
Flag-IKK
and Flag-IKKß
(25), have previously
been described and were kindly provided by R. Hay and S. Ghosh. Human
immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) or HTLV1 long terminal repeat
(LTR)-luciferase reporter plasmids were constructed by the cloning of a
KpnI-HindIII fragment containing the HIV-1 promoter or a SmaI-KpnI
fragment containing the HTLV-1 promoter upstream of the luciferase gene
in the pGL2 vector
(Promega).
Antibodies.
Antibodies directed against HA
(Y-11), ubiquitin (P4D1), SUMO-1 (FL-101), RelA (C-20), IKK
(FL-419), and PML (PG-M3) were purchased from Santa Cruz Biotechnology.
Anti-Flag (M2) was from Sigma, the anti-HA monoclonal antibody (MAb)
was from Cell Signaling Technology, and the anti-GM130 MAb was from BD
Transduction Laboratories. Tax proteins were revealed with the anti-Tax
MAb from hybridoma 168-A51 cells (AIDS Research and Reagent Program,
National Institutes of Health) or a polyclonal serum obtained by
immunizing rabbits with a purified maltose binding protein-Tax fusion
produced in bacteria.
Cell culture and transient-expression experiments. 293T cells were maintained in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium supplemented with 2 mM L-glutamine, 10% fetal calf serum, 1% penicillin-streptomycin, and 1 mM sodium pyruvate (Gibco). HTLV-1-infected (HUT102) or noninfected (Jurkat) T lymphocytes were maintained in RPMI 1640 medium with Glutamax-I (Gibco) supplemented with 10% fetal calf serum. 293T cells were transfected using the calcium phosphate precipitation procedure or using FuGENE 6 reagent (Roche) according to the manufacturer's instructions. The CEM T-lymphocyte cell line (2 x 107 cells) was transfected by electroporation with a Gene Pulser electroporator (Bio-Rad Laboratories).
Ni-NTA pulldown assays. 293T and CEM T cells were lysed 30 h and 48 h, respectively, after transfection, and Ni-nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA) pulldown assays were done as described before (7). Briefly, cell pellets were lysed under reducing and highly denaturing conditions using buffer A (6 M guanidinium-HCl, 0.1 M Na2HPO4-NaH2PO4, 0.01 M Tris-Cl, pH 8.0, 5 mM imidazole, 10 mM ß-mercaptoethanol) and incubated with Ni2+-NTA beads for 4 h at 4°C. The beads were washed with buffers A, B (8 M urea, 0.1 M Na2HPO4-NaH2PO4, 0.01 M Tris-Cl, pH 8.0, 10 mM imidazole, 10 mM ß-mercaptoethanol), and C (8 M urea, 0.1 M Na2HPO4-NaH2PO4, 0.01 M Tris-Cl, pH 6.3, 10 mM imidazole, 10 mM ß-mercaptoethanol), and the bound proteins were eluted with buffer D (300 mM imidazole, 0.15 M Tris-Cl, pH 6.7, 30% glycerol, 0.72 M ß-mercaptoethanol, 5% sodium dodecyl sulfate). All solutions contained a cocktail of inhibitors, including 50 mM NaF, 20 mM ß-glycerophosphate, 1 mM orthovanadate, 50 mM N-ethylmaleimide, and the protease inhibitor cocktail (Roche). To detect modified forms of endogenous Tax in HTLV-1-infected T lymphocytes, cells were lysed for 20 min in buffer A. The lysates were precipitated for 10 min on ice in 20% trichloroacetic acid. The precipitates were washed with acetone, dried, and solved in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). The purified proteins were submitted to electrophoresis on 4 to 12% bis-Tris NuPAGE gel (Invitrogen), transferred to a Hybond enhanced-chemiluminescence nitrocellulose membrane (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech), and immunoblotted with primary antibodies and corresponding secondary antibodies. The detection was performed using Lumi-Light Western blotting substrate (Roche). Detection and quantitation of chemiluminescent signals were performed with the Chemi-Smart 5000 apparatus and Bio-1D software (Vilber Lourmat, France).
Cell fractionation. 293T cells expressing Tax were washed in Tp I (20 mM HEPES buffer, pH 7.9, 2 mM MgCl2, 1 mM dithiothreitol) containing inhibitors as described above and then lysed on ice for 10 min in the same buffer containing 0.2% NP-40. The samples were centrifuged to collect the cytoplasmic fraction. The whole process was repeated a second time on the pellet to complete the extraction of cytoplasmic components from the nuclear pellet. The final pellet containing the nuclear fraction was lysed in buffer Tp II (Tp I supplemented with 420 mM KCl, 25% glycerol, and 1 mM EDTA) on ice for 20 min and centrifuged for 10 min to collect the nuclear fraction. Finally, each cytoplasmic or nuclear fraction was submitted to a Ni-NTA pulldown assay as described above.
Luciferase assays.
Tax-mediated transactivation of the
HTLV-1 and HIV-1 promoters via the activating transcription factor
(ATF)/CREB and NF-
B pathways, respectively, was
assayed by dual-luciferase assays. 293T cells (1.25 x
105 cells) were transfected into 12-well plates with 50 ng
of phRG-TK (Promega), which was used for monitoring transfection
efficiency, 500 ng of HTLV-LTR or HIV-1-LTR-luciferase
reporter plasmids, and either 50 ng or increasing amounts (100, 200,
and 400 ng) of the constructs coding for wild-type or mutant Tax as
indicated in the figure legends. Total amounts of DNA were equalized by
adding the empty vector into the transfection mixture. Cells were lysed
and subjected to luciferase assay 30 h after transfection
with a TD-20/20 luminometer (Turner Designs) using the dual-luciferase
reporter assay system (Promega). The results represent averages and
standard deviations for at least six independent
experiments.
Immunocytochemistry and confocal microscopy. Cells cultured on glass coverslips were transfected with 1 µg of expression plasmids for 28 h and fixed with Immunohistofix (A Phase Inc., Belgium), a zinc fixative free of aldehyde, to stabilize cellular structures for 10 min at room temperature (33), followed by incubation in 100% methanol at 20°C for 6 min. The cells were washed with PBS, blocked in PBS containing 0.5% gelatin (Bio-Rad) and 0.25% bovine serum albumin (Gibco), and incubated with the primary antibodies diluted in the blocking solution. The preparations were then washed with PBS containing 0.2% gelatin and incubated with the secondary antibodies, goat anti-mouse immunoglobulin G (IgG) conjugated to Alexa Fluor 488, goat anti-rabbit IgG conjugated to Alexa Fluor 546 (Molecular Probes), goat anti-mouse IgG2a conjugated to fluorescein isothiocyanate, or goat anti-mouse IgG1 coupled to biotin (Southern Biotechnology Associates, Ala.) for dual- and triple-immunofluorescence staining. Samples were washed and, when biotinylated goat anti-mouse IgG1 was used as the secondary antibody, cells were incubated for 20 min with Cy5-conjugated streptavidin (Jackson ImmunoResearch). Controls to test for secondary-antibody cross-reaction demonstrated the desired specificity of the fluorescent reagents. Samples were then mounted in DABCO-based medium (ICN Biomedicals) and analyzed with a laser scanning confocal microscope (LSM 510; Zeiss) using a 63x objective and light source wavelengths of 488, 543, and 633 nm.
| RESULTS |
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B, p50 and RelA
(4), and that Tax was
modified by ubiquitination
(7). In this work, we
analyzed by dual-immunofluorescence staining what compartment of the
cells contained colocalized Tax and ubiquitin molecules. In addition,
since SUMO modification of proteins correlates with their partitioning
in subnuclear domains, we also studied the relative intracellular
localizations of Tax and SUMO. First, 293T cells expressing Tax were
analyzed by immunofluorescence staining with a monoclonal antibody
directed against Tax and confocal microscopy (Fig.
1A). Examination of 200 Tax-expressing cells indicated that
82% of these cells exhibited Tax-containing nuclear bodies, including
58% of the Tax-expressing cells containing NB only and 24% of the cells
with an additional cytoplasmic staining. The remaining 18% displayed a
predominant cytoplasmic distribution of Tax without the formation of
Tax-containing nuclear bodies. The boundaries of the nuclei are clearly
pictured on the differential interference contrast image in Fig.
1A.
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Overexpressed SUMO-1 was detected exclusively in the nucleus as a diffuse nucleoplasmic staining with superimposed discrete bodies, which were PML bodies as demonstrated by the colocalized HA (SUMO) and PML staining. Coexpression of Tax and SUMO-1 led to the colocalization of Tax with exogenously expressed SUMO-1 in nuclear bodies but not in the cytoplasm, even in cells displaying intense cytoplasmic Tax staining. The formation of the Tax- and SUMO-1-containing nuclear bodies did not alter the localization of SUMO-1 in the PML bodies. There was no colocalization of the Tax and PML staining, but the majority of PML bodies were in close spatial proximity to Tax bodies, forming complex nuclear structures in which the Tax bodies were surrounded by one or more PML bodies. We concluded that colocalized Tax and ubiquitin molecules were detected only in the cytoplasm and that Tax colocalized with SUMO-1 only in the nuclear bodies.
We then tested whether overexpression of ubiquitin or SUMO altered the fraction of cells containing Tax in the cytoplasm, in the nuclear bodies, or both. The percentages of cells in each population were estimated by counting at least 200 Tax-expressing cells in the experiment depicted in Fig. 1B. The results presented in Fig. 1C are compared with those obtained in cells expressing only Tax in Fig. 1A. In cells overexpressing Tax and ubiquitin, the fraction of cells that had Tax both in the cytoplasm and in the nuclear bodies increased by a factor of 2. Inversely, the fraction of cells that had Tax in nuclear bodies decreased only by a factor of 2. In addition, the fraction of cells that displayed a concentration of Tax in cytoplasmic inclusions associated with the Golgi apparatus increased from 5% to 40%. In contrast, overexpression of SUMO-1 increased the fraction of cells with Tax in nuclear bodies only, whereas the fraction of cells having Tax in the cytoplasm was reduced. These results indicated that overexpression of ubiquitin favored the localization of Tax in the cytoplasm and the formation of the Tax-containing cytoplasmic inclusions associated with the Golgi apparatus and, inversely, that overexpression of SUMO-1 favored the localization of Tax in the nuclear bodies.
Tax is modified by conjugation of overlapping lysine residues to SUMO and ubiquitin. Since Tax colocalized with SUMO in nuclear bodies, we wondered whether Tax was conjugated to SUMO. To answer this question, 293T cells were transfected with a vector expressing Tax-6His. Following transfection, cells were lysed under highly denaturing conditions to inhibit the actions of desumoylating enzymes. The proteins were subjected to Ni-NTA pulldown assay, and the purified proteins were analyzed by immunoblotting with antibodies directed against SUMO-1 or Tax (Fig. 2A). Expression of Tax caused the appearance of an 80-kDa species, which was recognized by the anti-SUMO-1 antibody. This species was not detected in cells that did not express Tax or in cells expressing various Tax mutants (see below). It was faintly detected on the anti-Tax immunoblot among a number of other retarded Tax species previously attributed to ubiquitinated Tax molecules (7).
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To confirm and extend these observations, 293T cells were cotransfected with vectors expressing wild-type Tax-6His or a mutant that had all five central lysines from K4 to K8 (K4-8R Tax-6His) replaced by arginines (Fig. 2B) in combination with the vector for the expression of HA-SUMO-1. The proteins purified by Ni-NTA pulldown assay were analyzed by immunoblotting with anti-HA or anti-Tax antibodies (Fig. 2C). No reacting products were found in the absence of Tax, showing the high specificity of the Ni-NTA pulldown assay. Coexpression of wild-type Tax and HA-SUMO-1 led to the appearance of three prominent HA-containing species of 53, 66, and 80 kDa, with molecular masses compatible for mono-, di-, and tri-sumoylated products, as well as a ladder of poly-sumoylated slower-migrating forms. Interestingly, these sumoylated forms of Tax were not observed in mutant K4-8R-expressing cells. Band quantitation obtained by normalizing the sumoylated Tax products on the anti-HA immunoblot to an equal amount of unmodified 40-kDa Tax on the anti-Tax immunoblot (Fig. 2E) indicated that this mutant maintained only 14% of wild-type Tax sumoylation. These results indicated that the SUMO-modified species detected with the anti-HA antibody must be attributed to sumoylated Tax forms even though our rabbit polyclonal serum was unable to reveal these forms, presumably due to epitope masking.
Then, a new series of Tax mutants was constructed by reintroducing individual or multiple lysine residues in the context of mutant K4-8R (Fig. 2B). Reintroduction of single lysine K7 (R7K) or K8 (R8K) or all three lysines from K4 to K6 (R4-6K) did not increase the amount of sumoylated Tax products (Fig. 2C and E). By contrast, reintroduction of the two lysine residues K7 and K8 (R7-8K) increased the amount of sumoylated Tax products to 117% of the amount found in wild-type Tax-expressing cells. Reintroduction of lysines K4 and K5 in addition to K7 and K8 (R4-5/7-8K) restored sumoylation to 82%, suggesting that lysine residues K4 and K5 might exert an inhibitory effect on Tax sumoylation. Similar results were obtained when wild-type or mutant Tax proteins were coexpressed with either HA-SUMO-2 or HA-SUMO-3, the two other members of the SUMO family (data not shown). We concluded that the integrity of both lysine residues K7 and K8 was critical for Tax sumoylation and that restoration of individual lysine K7 or K8 resulted in defective Tax conjugation to SUMO.
Since the seven carboxy-terminal lysines of Tax are also implicated in the conjugation of Tax to ubiquitin (7), we analyzed the ability of the K4-8R mutant and the lysine restoration mutants for their ability to be ubiquitinated. Vectors for expression of these mutants were cotransfected into 293T cells with the HA-Ub expression vector, and proteins recovered by Ni-NTA pulldown assay were immunoblotted for the detection of HA or Tax (Fig. 2D). High-molecular-weight Tax products recognized by the anti-HA antibody were detected in wild-type Tax-expressing cells as previously demonstrated (7). These ubiquitin-conjugated Tax species were highly reduced in cells expressing mutant K4-8R (6% of wild-type Tax ubiquitination) (Fig. 2E). The wild-type level of ubiquitination was recovered by reintroduction of both lysines K7 and K8 (R7-8K) with or without the additional lysines K4 and K5 (R4-5/7-8K). Restoration of individual lysine K7 (R7K) or K8 (R8K) increased the levels of Tax ubiquitination to 56% and 65%, respectively, whereas the lysine restoration mutant R4-6K displayed 50% of wild-type Tax ubiquitination. These results indicated that lysine residues K7 and K8 were involved in Tax conjugation to both SUMO and ubiquitin. However, contrary to what was observed for SUMO conjugation, each of the K7 or K8 lysines could be individually ubiquitinated. In addition, lysine residues K4, K5, and/or K6 contributed to a significant extent to Tax ubiquitination but not to Tax sumoylation.
We then used cell fractionation to analyze the intracellular localization of ubiquitinated and sumoylated Tax molecules (Fig. 2F). Cytoplasmic and nuclear fractions from 293T cells expressing Tax alone or in combination with HA-Ub or HA-SUMO-1 were first analyzed by immunoblotting for the detection of Tax. The result indicated that Tax was predominantly localized in the nuclear fractions even in cells that overexpressed either ubiquitin or SUMO-1, although a significant amount of Tax was also present in the cytoplasmic fractions. The same fractions were then immunoblotted with an antibody directed against HA to detect the ubiquitinated or sumoylated Tax species. As expected from the immunofluorescence results (see above), the sumoylated Tax species were detected only in the nuclear fraction. Surprisingly, in contrast to what was observed by using immunofluorescence staining, ubiquitinated Tax species were present both in the cytoplasmic and in the nuclear fractions. The discrepancy between the results obtained from both techniques and the fact that both ubiquitin and Tax were highly concentrated in cytoplasmic inclusions connected to the nuclear envelope led us to analyze the purity of the nuclear fractions. We thus immunoblotted the fractionated cell extracts with the antibody directed against the Golgi marker GM130. This result indicated that GM130 was present both in the cytoplasmic and in the nuclear fractions. Any attempt to prevent copurification of GM130 with the nuclear fraction failed. Thus, ubiquitinated Tax molecules present in the nuclear fraction likely originated from Tax-containing cytoplasmic inclusions that copurified with the nuclei. It is interesting to note that the suspected nucleus-associated cytoplasmic inclusions predominantly contained poorly branched ubiquitinated Tax species, unlike the soluble cytoplasmic fraction.
At this point it was critical to demonstrate that Tax was modified by sumoylation in HTLV-1-transformed T lymphocytes. Cell extracts from HTLV-1-transformed HUT102 T lymphocytes lysed under highly denaturing conditions to preserve modifications were immunoblotted with an anti-Tax antibody, which revealed the 40-kDa unmodified Tax form and clearly distinguishable higher-molecular-weight Tax species (Fig. 2G). Alignment of this blot with control blots from Ni-NTA-purified Tax-6His species produced in 293T cells or Jurkat T cells with or without the expression of HA-Ub or HA-SUMO-1 enabled the identification of the tri-sumoylated 80-kDa Tax species along with mono-, di-, and tri-ubiquitinated Tax. We concluded that sumoylation and ubiquitination occurred not only on Tax molecules overproduced in fibroblasts and T cells but also on endogenous Tax molecules expressed by HTLV-1-transformed T lymphocytes.
Lysines K7 and K8 are critical for the ability of Tax to assemble nuclear bodies.
We then asked about the incidence of
modifications occurring on lysine residues K4 to K8 on Tax
intracellular localization. 293T cells were transfected with vectors
for the expression of wild-type Tax, the Tax mutant K4-8R, or each of
the lysine restoration mutants R4-6K, R7K, R8K, and R7-8K and analyzed
by immunofluorescence staining with an anti-Tax monoclonal antibody.
Since colocalization of Tax and the RelA subunit of NF-
B in
nuclear bodies is an important characteristic of these bodies
(4), an antibody directed
against RelA was included in the dual-immunofluorescence staining
procedure (Fig.
3). The fraction of cells that displayed Tax-containing nuclear bodies was
estimated by counting at least 100 cells that expressed each of these
Tax mutants. The measurement of the intensity of the fluorescence along
lines crossing the nuclei also enabled us to estimate the fraction of
cells in which the translocation of RelA to the nucleus had
occurred.
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Interestingly, among the
mutants that were not able to assemble nuclear bodies (K4-8R, R4-6K,
R7K, and R8K), mutant K4-8R was the sole mutant which was defective for
the translocation of RelA to the nucleus. Only 5% of the cells
expressing this mutant were able to translocate RelA to the nucleus. By
contrast, mutants R4-6K, R7K, and R8K, which were ubiquitinated to at
least 50% of wild-type Tax, displayed a diffuse nuclear distribution of
RelA in 61%, 57%, and 83% of the cells, respectively. Thus, a
correlation was observed between the level of ubiquitination and the
ability of Tax mutants to translocate the RelA subunit of NF-
B
to the nucleus.
Lysines K7 and K8 are critical for Tax activation of gene expression via the NF-
B pathway.
Tax activates viral
and cellular gene expression via modulation of the activity
of either the ATF/CREB or the NF-
B pathway. We thus asked
about the ability of the Tax mutants to activate gene
expression via these pathways. The vectors expressing wild-type or
mutant Tax were cotransfected in 293T cells with either an HIV-1 LTR or
an HTLV-1 LTR-luciferase reporter to assay for the effects of Tax on
the NF-
B or ATF/CREB pathway (Fig.
4A). Wild-type Tax activated gene expression from both the HIV-1 LTR
(7.4-fold ± 1-fold) and the HTLV-1 LTR (288-fold ±
45-fold). Mutant K4-8R and the lysine restoration mutants R4-6K and R7K
were highly affected in their ability to activate gene expression via
the NF-
B pathway, whereas mutant R8K displayed an intermediary
phenotype. By contrast, mutants R7-8K and R4-5/7-8K were almost not
affected. Immunoblot analysis performed on the extracts from the
luciferase assays demonstrated that the wild-type and mutant Tax
proteins were expressed at similar levels. Of note, the four mutants
that were highly affected in their ability to activate the
NF-
B pathway were also affected in their ability to activate
the ATF/CREB pathway although the effects were less stringent on the
latter pathway. At this point, it was important to test the ability of
these mutants to activate gene expression in a T-lymphocyte cell line.
Jurkat cells were cotransfected with wild-type or mutant Tax expression
vectors and the HIV-1 LTR-luciferase reporter plasmid and analyzed as
described above (Fig. 4B).
Results obtained with Jurkat cells were similar to results obtained
with 293T cells.
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B
pathway in fibroblasts and in T lymphocytes. These lysine residues also
played a role in the activation of gene expression via the ATF/CREB
pathway. Remarkably, mutant R4-6K, which was able to translocate the
RelA subunit of NF-
B to the nucleus in 61% of the cells (Fig.
3), was unable to activate
gene expression via the NF-
B pathway. This result indicated
that the migration of RelA to the nucleus was not sufficient for the
Tax-mediated activation of gene expression and suggested that other
events, including the sumoylation of Tax and the subsequent formation
of the Tax-containing nuclear bodies, might also be
required. Fusion of ubiquitin or SUMO to the modification-deficient K4-8R mutant restores the translocation of RelA to the nucleus but does not restore transcriptional activity. To study the specific role of Tax ubiquitination and sumoylation in Tax transcriptional activities, we next produced vectors for the expression of constitutively ubiquitinated or sumoylated Tax mutants that were intrinsically defective for ubiquitin and/or SUMO conjugation (mutants K4-8R and R4-6K). This was achieved by in-frame fusion of the ubiquitin or the SUMO-1 coding sequence to the 3' end of the sequence coding for these Tax mutants. This resulted in the production of vectors for the expression of K4-8R-Ub, K4-8R-SUMO-1, R4-6K-Ub, and R4-6K-SUMO-1. In addition, to check whether the fusion of ubiquitin or SUMO-1 to the carboxy terminus of wild-type Tax had no major inhibitory effects on Tax transcriptional activities, we also constructed vectors for the expression of the WT-Ub and WT-SUMO-1 fusions.
First, all these fusions were purified from transfected 293T cells by Ni-NTA pulldown assay and analyzed by immunoblotting for the detection of Tax, ubiquitin, or SUMO-1 (Fig. 5A). The fusions to SUMO-1 or ubiquitin were recognized by anti-SUMO-1 or antiubiquitin antibodies, respectively, and they migrated at molecular masses expected for constitutively mono-ubiquitinated (47-kDa) or mono-sumoylated (50-kDa) Tax proteins. All the fusions to ubiquitin displayed additional species with molecular masses expected for dimers and trimers (80 kDa and 120 kDa), indicating that the mutation of the di-glycine motif at the 3' end of the Tax-Ub fusions was unable to completely prevent the formation of branched Tax-Ub fusions. As expected from the results reported in Fig. 2C, the antiubiquitin immunoblot indicated that both the WT-SUMO-1 and R4-6K-SUMO-1 fusions could still be intrinsically ubiquitinated, unlike the K4-8R-SUMO-1 fusion.
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B. However, the majority of
the cells expressing the WT-Ub fusion had Tax distributed both in the
cytoplasm and in nuclear bodies, with an intense concentration of WT-Ub
in cytoplasmic inclusions in 78% of the Tax-Ub-expressing cells. In
contrast, most of the cells expressing WT-SUMO-1 displayed only
nuclear bodies. Thus, constitutive ubiquitination or sumoylation of Tax
favored the retention of Tax either in the cytoplasm or in the nucleus,
respectively, in a way similar to the effects observed when Tax was
coexpressed with HA-Ub or HA-SUMO (Fig.
1). We next tested the
transcriptional activity of these wild-type Tax fusions. Luciferase
reporter assays performed as described above indicated that levels of
activation of HIV and HTLV gene expression by the WT-Ub fusion were
111% ± 9% and 68% ± 8%, respectively, and that the
levels of activation by the WT-SUMO-1 fusion were 45% ±
6% and 42% ± 8% of the activities seen with nonfused Tax,
respectively (Fig. 5C and
D). We concluded that the fusion of ubiquitin or SUMO to
the carboxy terminus of Tax had no major detrimental effects on the
ability of Tax to assemble nuclear bodies that included the RelA
subunit of NF-
B and on Tax transcriptional
activities.
We then tested the phenotypes of the constitutively
ubiquitinated or sumoylated Tax mutant K4-8R, which was intrinsically
deficient for both modifications. As reported above, the nonfused Tax
K4-8R mutant was distributed in the cytoplasm and/or in the nucleus,
with no formation of nuclear bodies, and this mutant was unable to
induce the migration of RelA to the nucleus (Fig.
3). Remarkably, both the
K4-8R-Ub and K4-8R-SUMO-1 fusions translocated RelA to the
nucleus in 43% and 81% of the cells, respectively (Fig.
5B). These fusions were
predominantly localized in the cytoplasm. In addition, the
K4-8R-SUMO-1 fusion was able to assemble punctate nuclear
structures in 52% of the cells. These structures were, however, smaller
than the NB assembled by wild-type Tax, and the RelA subunit of
NF-
B was not recruited in these structures, as indicated by
the intensity of the fluorescence on the diagrams in Fig.
5B. The intracellular
localization of the R4-6K fusions will be analyzed below. We then
tested the transcriptional activity of the nonfused K4-8R mutant or the
fusions K4-8R-Ub and K4-8R-S1 by luciferase reporter assays after
cotransfection with the HIV-LTR-luciferase reporter in 293T cells. The
luciferase activities were normalized to the activity of each of the
homologous WT, WT-Ub, and WT-SUMO-1 proteins (Fig.
5C). The results indicated
that both K4-8R fusions were as defective for the activation of gene
expression via the NF-
B pathway as the nonfused K4-8R mutant.
Thus, as was observed for mutant R4-6K (Fig.
3 and
4A), the K4-8R-Ub and
K4-8R-SUMO-1 fusions were able to induce the migration of the
RelA subunit of NF-
B to the nucleus in a significant fraction
of the cells, but they were unable to activate gene expression via the
NF-
B pathway.
Fusion of SUMO to the carboxy terminus of Tax R4-6K partly restores the formation of Tax- and RelA-containing nuclear bodies and transcriptional activity.
We finally analyzed
the phenotypes of the ubiquitin or SUMO-1 fusions to the R4-6K mutant,
which was partly intrinsically ubiquitinated but not
sumoylated. Dual-immunofluorescence staining of cells
expressing R4-6K-Ub or R4-6K-SUMO-1 (Fig.
5B) indicated that the
R4-6K-Ub fusion was distributed in the cytoplasm of the majority of the
cells and was able to translocate the RelA subunit of NF-
B to
the nucleus in 100% of the cells. In contrast, the R4-6K-SUMO-1
fusion had a punctate distribution in the nucleus in 74% of the cells,
with at least partial recruitment of the RelA subunit of NF-
B
in the nuclear structures in 32% of the cells that displayed nuclear
bodies. Remarkably, fusion of SUMO-1 to the R4-6K mutant resulted in a
significant increase in the ability of this mutant to activate gene
expression via the NF-
B pathway (10.5-fold), whereas fusion of
ubiquitin resulted in only a 2.7-fold increase compared to the level of
activation of the nonfused R4-6K mutant (Fig.
5C). The same results were
obtained when luciferase activities were measured in cells transfected
with increasing amounts of the different Tax expression vectors (see
the supplemental material). We similarly tested the ability of the
K4-8R and R4-6K fusions to activate gene expression via the ATF/CREB
pathway (Fig. 5D).
Interestingly, although the K4-8R-Ub and the R4-6K-Ub fusions displayed
ATF/CREB activities similar to those of the homologous
nonfused mutants, fusion of SUMO-1 to both of these mutants
significantly increased their ability to activate gene expression via
the ATF/CREB pathway.
The fact that the fusion of
SUMO to the two intrinsically nonsumoylated Tax mutants K4-8R and R4-6K
restored their ability to assemble punctate nuclear structures
demonstrated that the sumoylation of Tax is critical for the assembly
of the Tax nuclear bodies. Since the fusion of ubiquitin or SUMO to the
unmodifiable Tax mutant K4-8R resulted in the restoration of the
ability to translocate RelA to the nucleus, we concluded that SUMO and
ubiquitin have the common property of conferring to Tax the ability to
translocate RelA to the nucleus. However, the fact that these fusions
were not able to activate gene expression via the NF-
B pathway
indicated that the translocation of RelA to the nucleus is insufficient
for Tax-mediated NF-
B activity. Since fusion of SUMO to the
R4-6K mutant partly restored the ability of Tax to activate the
NF-
B pathway, we concluded that transcriptional activity
requires in addition the formation of nuclear bodies in which the RelA
subunit of NF-
B is recruited. In contrast to the intrinsically
ubiquitinated R4-6K-SUMO-1 fusion, the nonubiquitinated
K4-8R-SUMO-1 fusion was not able to recruit RelA in the nuclear
bodies and had no transcriptional activity. From this observation, we
conclude that the formation of nuclear bodies that include RelA
requires not only the sumoylation of Tax but also its ubiquitination in
the cytoplasm. Finally, our results also suggested that the
ubiquitination of Tax was dispensable for the activation of gene
expression via the ATF/CREB pathway. However, sumoylation and the
subsequent assembly of Tax-containing nuclear bodies may be also
important for activation of gene expression via this
pathway.
Tax colocalizes with free IKK
in nuclear bodies and with IKK complexes in the cytoplasm.
Since Tax
activation of the NF-
B pathway involves its interaction with
the regulatory subunit of the IKK complex, NEMO/IKK
(8,
14,
21), we finally asked
about the relative intracellular localizations of Tax and components of
the IKK complex, IKK
, IKKß, and
IKK
. 293T cells were cotransfected with the vectors for the
expression of wild-type Tax or the K4-8R mutant in combination with
either a Flag-IKK
or a Flag-IKKß expression vector,
and the cells were analyzed by triple-immunofluorescence staining with
monoclonal antibodies directed against Tax and Flag and a rabbit
polyclonal antibody directed against IKK
. Z-series confocal
images were collected, and the projections are depicted in Fig.
6A.
|
and a granular
distribution of exogenously expressed IKK
, whereas
IKKß was distributed along cytoplasmic fibers. IKK
did
not colocalize with IKK
in cytoplasmic speckles, and a limited
colocalization of IKK
and overexpressed IKKß was
observed in cytoplasmic fibers. The nuclei of these cells did not
contain detectable IKK
or IKKß, but they displayed a
diffuse IKK
staining. In wild-type-Tax-expressing cells, the
Tax-containing NB included IKK
but no detectable IKK
or IKKß. In addition, Tax colocalized with both IKK
and IKK
in the cytoplasmic speckles and with both IKK
and IKKß in cytoplasmic fibers. Tax also colocalized with
IKK
in the cytoplasmic inclusion closely connected to the
nuclear envelope, as shown by the yellow color of these structures on
the overlay images in Fig.
6A. However, these
Tax-containing Golgi apparatus-associated cytoplasmic inclusions were
devoid of both IKK
and IKKß
staining.
Surprisingly, the nonubiquitinated and nonsumoylated
K4-8R mutant also colocalized with IKK complexes in the cytoplasmic
speckles and fibers, although this mutant, which was unable to assemble
nuclear bodies, did not colocalize with IKK
in the nucleus
(Fig. 6A). Similar to the
nonfused K4-8R mutant, the K4-8R-Ub and K4-8R-SUMO-1 fusions
colocalized with IKK
and IKKß in discrete cytoplasmic
structures (see the supplemental material). To confirm this result,
293T cells were cotransfected with the HA-Ub expression vector and
vectors expressing either wild-type Tax or the K4-8R mutant, and the
cells were stained with anti-Tax, anti-IKK
, and anti-HA
antibodies (Fig. 6B). As
expected from the results reported above, the cytoplasmic speckles
containing wild-type Tax included both IKK
and ubiquitin,
whereas the cytoplasmic speckles containing the K4-8R mutant included
IKK
but no ubiquitin. These results indicated that, in the
cytoplasm, Tax altered the intracellular localization of components of
the IKK complexes in an ubiquitin-independent manner, leading to their
colocalization with Tax in cytoplasmic speckled and fibrous structures.
However, as demonstrated before, translocation of the RelA subunit of
NF-
B to the nucleus was strictly dependent on Tax
modification. Thus, conjugation of Tax to ubiquitin was dispensable for
the assembly of the IKK complexes but necessary for the activation of
these complexes. In addition, sumoylated Tax molecules determined the
nuclear localization of free IKK
and its concentration with
Tax in the nuclear bodies.
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
B pathway. Tax colocalized with ubiquitin and IKK complexes
in the cytoplasm, leading to the translocation of the RelA subunit of
NF-
B to the nucleus. However, this function was insufficient
for Tax transcriptional activity. In addition, sumoylated Tax molecules
had to assemble nuclear bodies in which Tax colocalized with RelA and
free IKK
. A schematic diagram depicting a model for concerted
ubiquitin and SUMO conjugation of the HTLV-1 Tax protein in
Tax-mediated activation of the NF-
B pathway is presented in
Fig.
7. By using reintroduction of single or multiple lysine residues in the
context of a Tax mutant deficient for both ubiquitination and
sumoylation (mutant K4-8R), we also demonstrate that ubiquitination and
sumoylation of Tax occur on overlapping lysine residues. Each of the
lysine residues K4, K5, and K6 as well as K7 and K8 contributed
individually to Tax ubiquitination, whereas sumoylation required the
simultaneous integrity of both lysine residues K7 and K8 at amino acid
positions 280 and 284.
|
. In addition, the latter structure also included the RelA
subunit of NF-
B (data not shown). The functional role of the
association of ubiquitinated Tax with the Golgi apparatus is presently
unknown. However, the specific concentration of poorly branched
ubiquitinated Tax, free IKK
, and RelA in the cytoplasmic
inclusions and their close vicinity to the nuclear envelope suggest
that these structures might be involved in Tax ubiquitination and/or
desubiquitination and the transport of Tax along with free IKK
and RelA into the nucleus.
Both a nuclear localization signal
(39) and a nuclear export
signal (NES) (1) have been
identified in the Tax protein. Remarkably, Alefantis et al. mentioned
that the Tax NES likely exists as a conditionally masked signal because
the deletion of the carboxy-terminal sequence from amino acid 214
revealed this export signal. Thus, conjugation of Tax to SUMO-1 on
lysine residues at position 280 and/or position 284 might prevent NES
effects and Tax nuclear export. A number of proteins that shuttle
between the cytoplasm and the nucleus might undergo differential
intracellular retention by exclusive ubiquitination and sumoylation on
identical or closely spaced lysine residues. The available list
includes I
B
(9), IKK
/NEMO
(16), and the herein
described HTLV-1 Tax regulatory
protein.
Activation of IKK complexes by ubiquitinated Tax.
Our
results indicate that ubiquitinated Tax colocalized with components of
the IKK complexes, IKK
, IKKß, and IKK
, in
cytoplasmic speckled and fibrous structures. The redistribution of IKK
components by Tax is in complete concordance with the known physical
binding of Tax to IKK
, with subsequent recruitment of Tax to
the IKK catalytic subunits IKK
and IKKß, leading to
sustained phosphorylation and the turnover of I
B
as
well as the phosphorylation of RelA and subsequent migration of the
RelA subunit of NF-
B to the nucleus
(8,
14,
17,
21,
30). Interestingly, the
ubiquitination-deficient Tax mutant K4-8R also colocalized with IKK
complexes in the cytoplasm, but it was unable to induce the
translocation of RelA to the nucleus, and the fusion of ubiquitin to
this mutant restored the latter property. This result indicates that
the activation of IKK complexes but not the assembly of these complexes
requires Tax ubiquitination. In support of this conclusion, it is
interesting to note that the coimmunoprecipitation experiments
demonstrating the interaction between Tax and IKK
did not
likely preserve Tax conjugation to ubiquitin and that the GST-Tax
fusion produced in bacteria readily interacted with IKK
in
vitro (8,
17,
21). Tax interaction with
IKK
might simply involve a domain that was mapped to the
leucine-rich region between amino acids 106 and 141
(44). Surprisingly, the
fusion of SUMO-1 to the carboxy terminus of the K4-8R mutant also
restored the migration of RelA to the nucleus. This result suggests
that both ubiquitin and SUMO-1 conjugation might confer to Tax the
ability to activate IKK complexes. However, activation of cytoplasmic
IKK complexes by sumoylated Tax molecules is a rather artificial
situation created by the fusion to SUMO since intrinsically sumoylated
Tax molecules were not detected in the
cytoplasm.
Sumoylation-dependent assembly of Tax-containing nuclear bodies.
Here, we demonstrate that
Tax conjugation to SUMO-1 is a prerequisite for Tax to form
nuclear bodies. All the Tax mutants that were not sumoylated were
unable to assemble nuclear bodies, and the fusion of SUMO-1, but not
ubiquitin, to their carboxy termini significantly restored the ability
to form these nuclear structures. Interestingly, the fusion of SUMO-1
to the intrinsically unmodified K4-8R mutant restored both the
translocation of RelA to the nucleus and the formation of punctate
nuclear structures that did not include RelA, and this fusion was
defective for activation of the NF-
B pathway. In contrast, the
fusion of SUMO-1 to the R4-6K mutant, which was intrinsically
ubiquitinated but not sumoylated, restored the formation of
RelA-containing nuclear bodies and significantly increased
transcriptional activity. We conclude that the presence of
ubiquitinated Tax in the cytoplasm is required not only for the
migration of RelA to the nucleus but also for the subsequent
concentration of RelA in the nuclear bodies. Thus, both ubiquitination
and sumoylation are required for the Tax-mediated activation of gene
expression via the NF-
B pathway.
We previously
demonstrated that the nuclear bodies assembled by Tax included
components of the transcription and splicing complexes, including the
two subunits of NF-
B, p50 and RelA, and the transcriptional
coactivator CBP/p300 (4,
6). In this paper, we
demonstrate that IKK
was recruited in the Tax-containing
nuclear bodies but that neither IKK
nor IKKß was
detected in these nuclear structures. Sumoylated IKK
was
detected in the nucleus following genotoxic stress and, in concert with
ubiquitinated IKK
, permitted IKK activation in the cytoplasm
(16). Thus, Tax and
IKK
interact with each other and share similar routes in the
cell. However, it is not clear presently whether Tax alters SUMO
conjugation to IKK
or whether IKK
is brought to the
nucleus as a consequence of its interaction which Tax. In addition to
its cytoplasmic role in assembling IKK complexes, Verma et al.
identified a nuclear function of IKK
that involves its binding
to an amino-terminal domain of the transcriptional coactivator CBP,
counteracting the positive action of CBP/RelA/IKK
complexes on
the transcription initiated at NF-
B-responsive promoters
(43). It is worth
mentioning that Tax also interacts with the amino terminus of CBP and
that this interaction is critical for Tax transcriptional activities
(20). Since Tax
colocalizes in nuclear bodies with CBP, RelA, and
IKK
, it will be important to determine whether IKK
affects Tax and RelA binding to CBP. The mechanistic role of
the presence of IKK
in the nucleus in NF-
B activation
needs further investigations.
A role for Tax nuclear bodies as "transcription factories."
Recent
studies have demonstrated that active genes migrate to preassembled
shared nuclear subcompartments called transcription factories and that
movement in and out of these factories results in the activation or
abatement of transcription
(26,
32). In addition,
specific gene loci have been found to preferentially localize in close
spatial proximity to each of a variety of proteinaceous nuclear
structures, including PML bodies, Cajal bodies, and the nucleoli
(11). Our observations
that the Tax-containing nuclear bodies include not only components of
transcription and splicing complexes but also the mRNA from a gene
specifically activated by Tax via the NF-
B pathway
(4), that they are in
close spatial contact with decondensed chromatin (our unpublished
data), and that the defect of assembly of these structures leads to the
loss of transcriptional activation (this paper) strongly suggest that
the unique nuclear structures assembled by Tax are directly involved in
Tax activation of gene expression. The fact that nonsumoylated Tax
mutants were still able to partly activate gene expression via the
ATF/CREB pathway seems to be in contradiction with this hypothesis.
However, it is important to mention that our assays for transcriptional
activity utilize transiently transfected reporter genes that do not
have the complexity of chromatin templates. A role for the nuclear
bodies in the activation of gene expression via the latter pathway was
indicated by the significant increase of gene expression by SUMO fusion
to intrinsically sumoylation-defective Tax mutants. A more stringent
dependency on nuclear body structure might be observed for activation
of gene expression on in vivo templates.
Since ubiquitination and sumoylation play a critical role in Tax transcriptional activation, these modifications are potential targets for the treatment of adult T-cell leukemia.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
and Flag-IKKß expression vectors. I.L. and S.L. are recipients of grants from the Belgian National Fund for Scientific Research and FNRS-Télévie, and this work was supported by grants from the Belgian National Fund for Scientific Research and from the Internationale Brachet Stiftung.
| FOOTNOTES |
|---|
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://mcb.asm.org/. ![]()
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