Transactivation of elements in the human endogenous retrovirus w family by viral infection

TRANSACTIVATION OF ELEMENTS IN THE HUMAN ENDOGENOUS RETROVIRUS W FAMILY BY VIRAL INFECTION

Retrovirology. 2006 Jul 6;3:44

Nellaker C, Yao Y, Jones-Brando L, Mallet F, Yolken RH, Karlsson H

The Department of Neruroscience, Karolinska Institutet, Retzius vag 8, 171 77 Stockholm, Sweden. [email protected]

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Aberrant expression of human endogenous retrovirus (HERV) elements in the W family has previously been associated with schizophrenia, multiple sclerosis and preclampsia. Little is known regarding the basal expression, transcriptional regulation and functioning significance of individual HERV-elements. Since viral infections have previously been reported to transactivate retroviral long terminal repeat regions we examined the basal expression of HERV-W elements and following infections by influenza A/WSN/33 and Herpes simplex 1 viruses in human cell-lines

METHODS: Relative levels of transcripts encoding HERV-W elements and cellular genes were analyzed by qPCR methods. An analysis of amplicon melting temperatures was used to detect variations in the frequencies of amplicons in discrete ranges of such melting temperatures. These frequency-distributions were taken as proxy markers for the repertoires of transcribed HERV-W elements in the cells.

RESULTS: We report cell-specific expression patterns of HERV-W elements duing base-line conditions. Expressed elements include those with intact regulatory long terminal repeat regions (LTRs) as well as elements flanked by truncated LTRs. Subsets of HERV-W elements were transactivated by viral infection in the different cell lines. Transcriptional activation of these elements, including that encoding syncytin, was dependent on viral replication and was not induced by antiviral responses. Serum deprivation of cells induced similar changes in the expression of HERV-W elements suggesting that the observed phenomena are, in part, an effect of cellular stress.

CONCLUSION: We found that HERV-W elements, including elements lacking regulatory LTRs, are expressed in cell-specific patterns which can be modulated by environmental influences. This brings into light that mechanisms behind the regulation of expression of HERV-W elements are more complex than previously assumed and suggests biological functions of these transcripts.