These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: Enhanced nuclear factor-kappa B activation induced by tumour necrosis factor-alpha in stably tat-transfected cells is associated with the presence of cell-surface-bound Tat protein. Author: Ramazzotti E, Vignoli M, Re MC, Furlini G, La Placa M. Journal: AIDS; 1996 May; 10(5):455-61. PubMed ID: 8724035. Abstract: OBJECTIVE: An enhanced nuclear factor (NF)-kappa B activation in response to tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha has been observed in stably tat-transfected cells. Recent experimental evidence suggests that Tat may autocrinously influence both cellular physiology and HIV-1 long terminal repeat-directed gene expression in Tat-producing cells. Therefore, the possible association of a Tat autocrinous loop with the enhanced NF-kappa B-binding activity induced by TNF-alpha in Tat-producing cells was studied by anti-Tat antibody blocking experiments. DESIGN AND METHODS: Permanently tat-transfected Jurkat cells, maintained either in the presence or absence of anti-Tat antibody, were studied for the presence of TNF-alpha-induced NF-kappa B-binding activity (quantified by electrophoretic mobility shift assays) and the presence of cell-surface-bound Tat (determined by flow cytometry and confocal microscopy of anti-Tat immunofluorescence-stained cell preparations. RESULTS: The enhanced production of TNF-alpha-induced NF-kappa B binding activity exhibited by tat-transfected Jurkat cells was completely abolished in cell cultures maintained in the presence of anti-Tat antibody, thus indicating that the increased TNF-alpha-induced NF-kappa B binding activity observed in Jurkat-tat cells was dependent on the presence of Tat protein in an antibody-accessible location. In accordance with these findings, immunofluorescence-stained preparations of unfixed tat-transfected Jurkat cells showed the presence of cell-surface-bound Tat protein which was completely absent in cells incubated in the presence of anti-Tat antibodies. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates that the enhanced NF-kappa B activation exhibited by stably tat-transfected cells in response to TNF-alpha, is associated with cell surface interaction of extracellularly released Tat protein. These data add further evidence to the possible relevance of a Tat autocrinous loop in the physiology of Tat-producing cells and suggest that in HIV-1-infected cells Tat is likely to behave as a bifunctional molecule which not only acts from within facilitating NF-kappa B recruitment in the viral transcription complex, but may also act from without increasing the availability of activated NF-kappa B.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]