A critical step in the life cycle of complex retroviruses, including HTLV-1 and HTLV-2 is the ability of these viruses to adopt a mechanism by which the genome-length unspliced mRNA as well as the partially spliced mRNAs are exported from the nucleus instead of being subjected to splicing or degradation. In HTLV, this is accomplished through the expression of the viral Rex, which recognizes a specific response element on the incompletely spliced mRNAs, stabilizes them, inhibits their splicing, and utilizes the CRM1-dependent cellular pathway for transporting them from the nucleus to the cytoplasm. Rex itself is regulated by phosphorylation, which implies that proper activation of the protein in response to certain cellular cues is an important tool for the virus to ensure that specific viral gene expression is allowed only when the host cell can provide the best conditions for virion production. Having such a critical role in HTLV life cycle, Rex is indispensable for efficient viral replication, infection and spread. Indeed, Rex is considered to regulate the switch between the latent and productive phases of the HTLV life cycle. Without a functional Rex, the virus would still produce regulatory and some accessory gene products; however, structural and enzymatic post-transcriptional gene expression would be severely repressed, essentially leading to non-productive viral replication. More detailed understanding of the exact molecular mechanism of action of Rex will thus allow for better design of therapeutic drugs against Rex function and ultimately HTLV replication. Herein we summarize the progress made towards understanding Rex function and its role in the HTLV life cycle.
The Rex protein of human T-cell leukemia virus (HTLV) acts posttranscriptionally to induce the cytoplasmic expression of the unspliced and incompletely spliced viral RNAs encoding the viral structural and enzymatic proteins and is therefore essential for efficient viral replication. Rex function requires nuclear import, RNA binding, multimerization, and nuclear export. In addition, it has been demonstrated that the phosphorylation status of HTLV-2 Rex (Rex-2) correlates with RNA binding and inhibition of splicing in vitro. Recent mutational analyses of Rex-2 revealed that the phosphorylation of serine residues 151 and 153 within a novel carboxy-terminal domain is critical for function in vivo. To further define the functional domain structure of Rex-2, we evaluated a panel of Rex-2 mutants for subcellular localization, RNA binding capacity, multimerization and trans-dominant properties, and the ability to shuttle between the nucleus and the cytoplasm. Rex-2 mutant S151A,S153A, which is defective in phosphorylation and function, showed diffuse cytoplasmic staining, whereas mutant S151D,S153D, previously shown to be functional and in a conformation corresponding to constitutive phosphorylation, displayed increased intense speckled staining in the nucleoli. In vivo RNA binding analyses indicated that mutant S151A,S153A failed to efficiently bind target RNA, while its phosphomimetic counterpart, S151D,S153D, bound twofold more RNA than wild-type Rex-2. Taken together, these findings provide direct evidence that the phosphorylation status of Rex-2 is linked to cellular trafficking and RNA binding capacity. Mutants with substitutions in either of the two putative multimerization domains or in the putative activation domain-nuclear export signal displayed a dominant negative phenotype as well as defects in multimerization and nucleocytoplasmic shuttling. Several carboxy-terminal mutants that displayed wild-type levels of phosphorylation and localized to the nucleolus were also partially impaired in shuttling. This is consistent with the hypothesis that the carboxy terminus of Rex-2 contains a novel domain that is required for efficient shuttling. This work thus provides a more detailed functional domain map of Rex-2 and further insight into its regulation of HTLV replication.Human T-cell leukemia virus types 1 and 2 (HTLV-1 and HTLV-2) are closely related complex retroviruses that have been causally associated with a variety of human diseases. HTLV-1 is associated with adult T-cell leukemia, an aggressive CD4 ϩ T-cell malignancy, and a chronic neurodegenerative disorder termed HTLV-associated myelopathy/tropical spastic paraparesis (HAM/TSP) (24, 41, 69). HTLV-2 is less clearly associated with disease, with only a few cases of leukemia or neurological disease reported (34, 55, 56). The genetic basis for the difference in pathobiology of HTLV-1 and HTLV-2 is not yet clear but likely resides in the activities of the regulatory and/or accessory proteins, thus highlighting the importance of comparative structure and functi...
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