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Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews, September 2002, p. 396-406, Vol. 66, No. 3
1092-2172/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MMBR.66.3.396-406.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Critical Role of Human T-Lymphotropic Virus Type 1 Accessory Proteins in Viral Replication and Pathogenesis
Björn Albrecht1,2,
and Michael D. Lairmore1,2,3,4,5*
Center for Retrovirus Research,1
Department of Veterinary Biosciences,2
Comprehensive Cancer Center and Arthur G. James Cancer Hospital,3
Solove Research Center,4
Department of Molecular Virology, Immunology, and Medical Genetics, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 432105

SUMMARY
Human T-cell lymphotropic virus type 1 (HTLV-1) infection is
associated with a diverse range of lymphoproliferative and neurodegenerative
diseases, yet pathogenic mechanisms induced by the virus remain
obscure. This complex retrovirus contains typical structural
and enzymatic genes but also unique regulatory and accessory
genes in four open reading frames (ORFs) of the pX region of
the viral genome (pX ORFs I to IV). The regulatory proteins
encoded by pX ORFs III and IV, Tax and Rex, respectively, have
been extensively characterized. In contrast the contribution
of the four accessory proteins p12
I, p27
I, p13
II, and p30
II,
encoded by pX ORFs I and II, to viral replication and pathogenesis
remained unclear. Proviral clones that are mutated in either
pX ORF I or II, while fully competent in cell culture, are severely
limited in their replicative capacity in a rabbit model. Emerging
evidence indicates that the HTLV-1 accessory proteins are critical
for establishment of viral infectivity, enhance T-lymphocyte
activation, and potentially alter gene transcription and mitochondrial
function. HTLV-1 pX ORF I expression is critical to the viral
infectivity in resting primary lymphocytes, suggesting a role
for p12
I in lymphocyte activation. The endoplasmic reticulum
and cis-Golgi localizing p12
I, encoded from pX ORF I, activates
NFAT, a key T-cell transcription factor, through calcium-mediated
signaling pathways and may lower the threshold of lymphocyte
activation via the JAK/STAT pathway. In contrast p30
II localizes
to the nucleus and represses viral promoter activity, but may
regulate cellular gene expression through p300/CBP or related
coactivators of transcription. p13
II targets mitochondrial proteins,
where it alters the organelle morphology and may influence energy
metabolism. Collectively, studies of the molecular functions
of the HTLV-1 accessory proteins provide insight into strategies
used by retroviruses that are associated with lymphoproliferative
diseases.

INTRODUCTION
Human T-cell lymphotropic virus type 1 (HTLV-1) infection currently
persists in 10 to 20 million people worldwide but is a particular
problem in regions of endemicity in the Caribbean, Japan, Africa,
and South America and among at-risk groups in the United States
(
10,
39,
85,
94). The virus is the etiologic agent of adult
T-cell lymphoma or leukemia, an aggressive malignancy of CD4
+ T lymphocytes, and initiates the neurodegenerative disease tropical
spastic paraparesis-HTLV-1-associated myelopathy (
15,
55,
118).
The virus infection is also associated with a variety of other
immune-mediated disorders, most likely through its ability to
induce T-lymphocyte activation (
10,
56,
88). HTLV-1 is a highly
cell-associated virus, and transmission occurs through routes
that promote lymphocyte transfer (
44,
119). While the epidemiology
and diseases associated with HTLV-1 are well characterized,
the molecular mechanisms used by the virus to establish persistent
infection and subsequently promote lymphocyte proliferation
while evading elimination by the host immune response remain
poorly defined.
The genome of HTLV-1 encodes the common structural and enzymatic proteins typical of all retroviruses (i.e., Gag, Pol, and Env). In addition, as a complex retrovirus, HTLV-1 uses alternative splicing and internal initiation codons to produce several regulatory and accessory proteins encoded by four open reading frames (ORFs) predominantly located in the pX region (pX ORF I to IV) of the viral genome between env and the 3' long terminal repeat (42). A doubly spliced, 2.1-kb mRNA containing elements of the 5' long terminal repeat, pol, and the pX region encodes the regulatory proteins Tax (pX ORF IV) and Rex (pX ORF III) (49, 68, 77, 95). Through interaction with cellular transcription factors, Tax potently activates transcription not only from the viral promoter (Tax-responsive element) but also from the enhancer elements of many cellular genes involved in host cell proliferation (47, 97, 104, 105, 128). Rex is responsible for nuclear export of unspliced or singly spliced viral RNA (52). For a more detailed discussion on Tax and Rex function the reader is referred to a number of recent reviews (59, 77, 95, 105).

HTLV-1 ACCESSORY PROTEINS EXPRESSED FROM pX GENE REGION
In addition to Tax and Rex, pX ORFs I and II produce alternatively
spliced forms of mRNA, which encode four accessory proteins,
p12
I, p27
I, p13
II, and p30
II (Table
1) (
13,
24,
45,
71). These
alternative mRNA and protein products were initially believed
to be dispensable for viral replication (
37,
107). However,
over the past several years a number of reports have been published
demonstrating that the HTLV-1 accessory proteins are critical
for viral infectivity and maintenance of high viral loads, host
cell activation, and regulation of gene transcription (
3,
12,
25,
29,
60,
75,
96,
129,
130). These studies illustrate the
critical function of these HTLV-1 accessory proteins during
viral replication, and as a result these proteins should more
appropriately be considered essential proteins that regulate
virus-host cell interactions during the natural infection.
In addition to the bicistronic mRNA encoding Tax and Rex, HTLV-1
expresses at least five other species of pX mRNA, including
those encoding the less well characterized p21
Rex (Fig.
1) (
13,
24,
71). mRNA species specific for four accessory proteinsp12
I,
p27
I, p13
II, and p30
IIcan be detected in cells transfected
with HTLV-1 molecular clones, HTLV-1 immortalized or transformed
cell lines, and freshly isolated leukocytes from virus-infected
subjects with or without disease (
13,
19,
24,
71). Similar to
the circumstances of Tax and Rex, there exists limited detailed
knowledge about the specific quantities and timing of expression
for these four accessory proteins during the course of the natural
infection. Indirect evidence of their expression in vivo has
been revealed from studies of the immune response to the viral
infection. Serum antibodies (
20,
35) as well as cytotoxic T
cells (
103) directed against recombinant proteins or peptides
representing these proteins have been detected in diseased patients,
as well as from asymptomatic carriers. Thus, proteins encoded
by pX ORF I and II are produced during the course of the viral
infection at levels sufficient to elicit both specific antibody
and cell-mediated immune responses in infected subjects.
Interestingly, analogous gene regions encoding the accessory
proteins, especially the pX ORF I-encoded p12
I, are highly conserved
in the closely related virus HTLV-2 and the nonhuman primate
counterpart of HTLV-1, simian T-cell lymphotropic virus type
1 (
23,
110,
115). Further illustration of the conserved nature
of these gene regions comes from studies of another member of
the deltaretroviruses, bovine leukemia virus (BLV). This virus,
like HTLV-1, contains an X region between the
env sequences
and the 3' long terminal repeat. Two proteins are expressed
from this region of BLV: the protein R3, which shares a common
nuclear localization signal (NLS) with the Rex protein of HTLV-1,
and G4, an arginine-rich protein that may exist as two isoforms
following protease processing (
62,
76,
122). Similar to HTLV-1,
deletion of homologous sequences from BLV infectious molecular
clones encoding these accessory proteins, R4 and G3, results
in decreased viral loads in the experimental sheep model (
62,
123). Collectively these studies illustrate that these retroviruses,
which are all associated with lymphoproliferative disorders,
during the course of their evolution have retained conserved
gene regions that apparently serve analogous functional roles.

ROLE OF pX ORF I P12I IN VIRAL REPLICATION AND T-CELL ACTIVATION
Alternative splicing events that combine the second exon of
Tax with additional downstream sequences produce pX ORF I mRNA.
This message potentially encodes two accessory proteins, the
152-amino-acid p27
I and the 99-amino-acid p12
I. Translation
of the latter is initiated at an internal methionine codon in
the p27
I ORF. Alternatively, p12
I can be translated from a singly
spliced message produced by direct splicing of nucleotide 119
to the splice acceptor at position 6383 (
24,
71). Interestingly,
transfection of expression plasmids containing HA
1-tagged versions
of either the full-length p27
I cDNA or the cDNA for the singly
spliced p12
I yield only the smaller p12
I (
71). In contrast,
using in vitro transcription-translation systems, Ciminale et
al. (
24) produced p27
I from the doubly spliced mRNA. Thus, it
is possible that p12
I is preferentially produced from the p27
I mRNA and that removal of the internal p12
I AUG start codon could
yield detectable levels of p27
I. Pique et al. (
103) demonstrated
production of cytotoxic T cells in HTLV-1-infected subjects
that were reactive against peptides representing all putative
pX accessory proteins, including p27
I. These results suggest
that p27
I, along with p12
I, p13
II, and p30
II, is produced during
the course of the natural infection in vivo.
Biochemical Features of a Signaling Molecule
Amino acid sequence analysis of p12
I reveals a highly hydrophobic
protein with 32% of its amino acids being leucine and 17% being
proline (
71). Hydropathy and immunogenicity plots alike demonstrate
a minimal number of soluble regions and suggest two transmembrane
domains extending from amino acid 12 to 30 and amino acid 48
to 67 (
71,
117). These putative transmembrane domains roughly
overlap with two predicted leucine zipper motifs, which form
alpha-helices. These structural features could contribute to
membrane localization or homo-oligomerization of the protein
(Fig.
2). Using HA
1-and AU
1-tagged versions of p12
I transiently
overexpressed in HeLa-Tat cells, Trovato et al. (
117) demonstrated
by immunoprecipitation and immunoblot analysis that the protein
indeed forms at least dimers, if not oligomers. However, the
presence of several helix-breaking proline residues within the
predicted leucine zippers warrants caution about whether functional
leucine zippers or simply hydrophobic protein domains contribute
to the oligomerization of the protein. Furthermore, p12
I contains
at least three predicted SH3-binding motifs (
42,
117) (Fig.
2). Similar motifs in cellular signaling proteins are typically
proline rich with a minimal core of PXXP and are often preceded
by an arginine residue at +2 (
18,
73). Interestingly, the sequences
encoding the first and third PXXP motifs of p12
I (amino acids
8 to 11 and 70 to 74) are highly conserved among viral strains,
suggesting a role for these domains in the function of p12
I (
42). In addition, a dileucine motif (DXXXLL) is found at amino
acid positions 26 to 31 (Fig.
2). As shown for HIV Nef, dileucine
motifs are commonly involved in directing protein trafficking
through endosomal compartments by mediating association of the
protein with adapter protein 1 (AP-1) to AP-3 (
30,
106). However,
no functional role has yet been established for the proposed
motif in HTLV-1 p12
I. A ubiquitylation motif surrounds the lysine
at position 88 of HTLV-1 p12
I. While the functional significance
of this motif remains unclear, arginine substitution at this
position, which is commonly found among natural HTLV-1 strains,
significantly enhances the half-life of the protein (
117).
Cytoplasmic Expression and Cellular Protein Interactions
When transiently expressed in fibroblasts HTLV-1 p12
I localizes
to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and
cis-Golgi compartments
(
38,
61,
70,
72). Intriguingly, we recently demonstrated that
p12
I associates with two ER-resident calcium-binding proteins,
calreticulin and calnexin (
38). Calreticulin, a highly conserved
and ubiquitous protein, serves as one of the major calcium-binding
proteins in the ER, participates in calcium signaling, and has
been linked to activation of the transcription factor nuclear
factor of activated T cells (NFAT) (
74,
90). Furthermore, calreticulin
functions as a regulator of neoangiogenesis, and the N terminus
of the protein, designated vasostatin, is used as a therapeutic
angiogenesis inhibitor (
102). It would be advantageous for a
virus to target such a conserved protein in order to dysregulate
calcium signaling pathways and activate NFAT in infected T lymphocytes.
Overall HTLV-p12I shares sequence homology with bovine papillomavirus (BPV) E5 and Epstein-Barr virus LMP-1 (43). The region of highest homology starts after the first and extends into the second transmembrane domain of p12I. Interestingly, p12I functionally cooperates with BPV E5 in transformation of mouse C127 fibroblasts and, like E5, binds to the 16-kDa subunit of the vacuolar H+ ATPase (16K) (43). Although this association appears to be required for the E5-mediated transformation of epithelial cells, no clear correlation was found between p12I-16K interaction and cooperative transformation with BPV E5, leaving the functional significance of the p12I-16K interaction to be determined. Attempts to further map the motif in p12I responsible for the association with 16K did not clearly identify a specific domain in the viral protein. Although the region between amino acids 36 and 48 of p12I is necessary for the interaction, it alone is not sufficient for binding (72). Interestingly, Nef, a key accessory protein of simian immunodeficiency virus and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), binds the catalytic subunit NBP-1 of the ATPase (78). NBP-1 association of Nef mediated by the Nef C-terminal flexible loop is critical for Nef-dependent internalization of CD4 and viral infectivity (81).
Several reports have suggested an involvement of HTLV-1 p12I in the modulation of T-cell-specific signal transduction pathways. Using transient transfections in HeLa-Tat cells, Mulloy et al. (93), using transient-coexpression assays, reported that HTLV-1 p12I interacts with the immature forms of the interleukin-2 receptor ß (IL-2Rß) and {gamma} chains, resulting in reduced surface expression of the receptor chains. The IL-2R binding region of p12I mapped to amino acids 37 to 47, which lie directly in front of the C-terminal proposed transmembrane domain of the protein. The p12I-binding site on the IL-2R chain overlaps with the binding site for JAK kinases 1 and 3 and the adapter protein Shc. Although p12I does not influence JAK3 kinase activity directly, Nicot et al. (96) recently demonstrated a modest increase in STAT5 activity in 293T cells transfected with p12I and all components of the IL-2R signaling complex and in primary human lymphocytes transduced with a p12I-expressing lentiviral vector. As a consequence, p12I-expressing cells displayed a decreased requirement for IL-2 to induce proliferation during suboptimal stimulation with anti-CD3 and anti-CD28 antibodies (96). Conversely, peripheral blood-derived lymphocyte cell lines immortalized by transfection with HTLV-1 infectious molecular clones with selected elimination of pX ORF I have intact IL-2R signaling pathways (28). Thus, following immortalization p12I does not appear to be necessary for the activation of the IL-2R-associated Janus kinases, JAK1 and JAK3, or their downstream effectors STAT3 and STAT5. Taken together, these findings indicate that p12I may induce STAT activity to confer a growth advantage to infected cells during the early stages of infection that precede the immortalized T-cell state. It remains to be elucidated by which JAK3-independent pathway p12I induces STAT5 activation.
When coexpressed in HeLa-Tat cells, p12I binds immature forms of the major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) and directs its degradation in the proteasome (60, 61). In this system p12I localizes to the ER and decreases the surface expression of transfected MHC-I in HeLa-Tat cells and endogenous MHC-I in Jurkat cells transduced with a p12I encoding lentiviral vector. These data suggest that p12I-mediated down regulation of MHC-I surface expression might aid the virus in escaping immune surveillance. In contrast, T-lymphocytes immortalized with the wild type and p12I-mutant clones ACH and ACH.p12 expressed equal levels of MHC-I and -II, indicating that if p12I modulates MHC-I surface expression it is likely to occur only during the early stages of infection (28). In a similar manner, the accessory proteins p10I and p11V of HTLV-2 also associate with MHC-I, but these do not bind to either 16K or IL-2Rß or -{gamma} (60). These results are intriguing, because HIV type 1 (HIV-1) Nef binds to and down regulates the cell surface expression of MHC-I and is believed to contribute to immune evasion by HIV-1 (100). Despite this evidence down regulation of MHC-I of virus-infected cells also does not appear to explain the early loss of infectivity of a molecular clone of HTLV-1 that lacks ORF I expression, as virus infection is blocked as early as 1 week postinoculation, prior to the time one would expect an active immune response (29). It remains to be shown whether HTLV-1 p12I down regulates MHC-I expression on infected peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) in vivo and actively contributes to viral spread or persistence. To address this question studies of early virus replication immediately after inoculation of virus-infected cells in appropriate animal models will be required.
Regulation of Viral Infectivity by HTLV-1 p12I
Initial studies reported that deletion of pX ORF I from HTLV-1
infectious molecular clones had no adverse effects on the virus'
ability to infect and transform primary lymphocytes in vitro
(
37,
107). In contrast, our research group demonstrated that
selective elimination of pX ORF I from the molecular clone ACH
resulted in dramatically reduced viral infectivity in vivo (
29).
Rabbits inoculated with ACH.p12, which is mutated and does not
express pX ORF I mRNA, failed to establish persistent infection
as indicated by reduced anti-HTLV-1 antibody responses, failure
to demonstrate viral p19 antigen production in PBMC cultures,
and only transient detection of provirus by PCR (
29). The most
striking difference between these in vitro and in vivo studies
is that standard in vitro coculture techniques used to transmit
virus to naïve PBMC utilize target cells stimulated by
IL-2 and mitogen. However, in vivo the majority of circulating
and tissue-associated lymphocytes are nondividing. To test whether
p12
I is critical for optimal viral infectivity in nonactivated
primary cells in vitro, we designed coculture assays that would
allow transmission of the virus to resting primary lymphocytes
(
3). These assays were based on the coculture of a variety of
HTLV-1 producing cells with naïve (nondividing) PBMC in
the absence of exogenous stimuli to more accurately reflect
the virus-cell interactions during the natural infection. Under
these conditions, we demonstrated a dramatic reduction in the
viral infectivity of the p12
I mutant ACH.p12 in primary lymphocytes.
Furthermore, upon addition of mitogen to the coculture, the
mutant's ability to infect primary cells was restored (
3). These
data provided the first evidence that HTLV-1 p12
I is required
for optimal viral infectivity in nondividing primary lymphocytes
and suggested a role of p12
I in T-lymphocyte activation. Analogously,
studies of HIV-1 Nef indicate that the accessory protein is
dispensable for transmission of the virus to activated target
cells in vitro but is required for viral infectivity in nondividing
lymphocytes (
22,
31,
79,
99,
101,
112,
127).
We have recently reported that p12I expression in Jurkat cells results in an approximately 20-fold activation of NFAT-dependent gene expression, while AP-1- or NF-
B-mediated transcription remained unchanged (5). HTLV-1 p12I specifically induced NFAT-mediated transcription in synergy with the Ras/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway. Inhibition of calcium-dependent signals by cyclosporine, BAPTA-AM and a dominant negative mutant of NFAT2 abolished the p12I-mediated activation of NFAT-dependent transcription. In contrast, inhibition of more proximal signaling, such as that through phospholipase C-gamma, did not affect p12I-induced NFAT activity (5). Importantly, p12I functionally substituted for thapsigargin, which selectively depletes intracellular calcium stores. Thus, HTLV-1 p12I in a calcium-dependent manner appears to activate NFAT-mediated transcription in lymphoid cells. These recent studies collectively implicate a novel mechanism by which this HTLV-1 accessory protein may dysregulate common T-cell activation pathways critical for the virus to establish persistent infection.
Subcellular localization studies indicated that p12I colocalizes with the ER-resident, calcium-binding proteins calreticulin and calnexin (38). Most strikingly, expression of p12I results in increased cytosolic calcium, indicating that HTLV-1 p12I induces release of calcium from the ER to activate NFAT (W. Ding, J. Virol., in press). Thus, the viral protein appears to act in the ER to activate calcium-mediated signaling, which would be an obvious advantage for the virus by activating T cells during the early stages of HTLV-1 infection. Cellular stimuli that would normally induce only partial activation of T cells (e.g., through AP-1) could through the influence of p12I become fully activated due to enhanced NFAT activity. These stimuli could be triggered by cytokines or chemokines released from infected neighboring cells or by direct contact between viral envelope proteins and certain cell surface receptors on newly targeted lymphocytes prior to viral entry (9, 114). Calreticulin and calnexin each have been demonstrated to modulate calcium storage and control protein folding, including several viral glycoproteins, in the ER (74, 91). Within the ER, p12I may serve to modulate calcium-mediated signals involved in cell activation. Alternatively, these proteins may serve as molecular chaperones to regulate the folding of p12I. Further studies will be required to determine the possible role of p12I in calcium storage and release from the ER. Interestingly, Johnson et al. (60, 61) have reported that p12I binds to the heavy chain of MHC-I and prevents its association with ß2-microglobulin, impairing the traffic of the protein complex. Calreticulin also acts as a chaperone in the assembly and expression of MHC-I molecules in activated human T lymphocytes (8). One potential mechanism to explain the ability of p12I to interfere with MHC-I complex transport is by binding and retaining calreticulin-MHC-I complexes in the ER or cis-Golgi.
Together our data support the tenet that HTLV-1 p12I causes an increase in calcium release from the ER to activate NFAT. Interestingly, the cellular protein CAML (Ca2+-modulating cyclophilin ligand) induces calcium release from the ER in a fashion proposed for HTLV-1 p12I (120). Like HTLV-1 p12I, CAML contains two putative transmembrane domains, colocalizes with calreticulin in the ER, and leads to NFAT activation (53, 54). Thus, the accessory protein p12I of HTLV-1 appears to mimic the function of a host cell protein to increase cytosolic calcium and thus facilitate pathological T-cell activation and eventually viral infection and replication.
Role in T-Cell Activation
Calcium-dependent activation of NFAT facilitates productive
infection of primary lymphocytes by HIV (
69). Primary CD4
+ T
cells stably expressing NFAT2 became highly susceptible to HIV
infection, while cells transduced with empty vector did not.
Susceptibility of these cells to HIV infection could be restored
by phytohemagglutinin treatment, which is most likely due to
the phytohemagglutinin-induced upregulation of NFAT activity.
These data concur with our findings that addition of mitogens
can rescue the infectivity of a p12
I mutant viral clone in resting
PBMC (
3), most likely by overriding the requirement for p12
I-induced
activation of NFAT. It will therefore be critical to examine
the effect of cyclosporine in HTLV-1 replication in primary
lymphocytes and compare the drug's capacity to affect replication
of wild type and p12
I mutant clones. Interestingly, cyclosporine
reduces the infectivity of HIV and is strongly dependent on
the presence of a functional
nef gene (
1). Manninen et al. have
delineated the induction of NFAT activity in Nef-expressing
Jurkat cells (
83,
84). Similarly to HTLV-1 p12
I, this induction
required calcium signaling and the synergistic action of the
Ras/MAPK pathway. In sharp contrast to HTLV-1 p12
I, however,
Nef-mediated NFAT activation is dependent on plasma membrane
localization of the viral protein, as well as association with
PAK2, suggesting an involvement of the PAK2/Vav/CASK pathway.
This indicates that HIV Nef induces NFAT activity via a molecular
mechanism that is clearly distinct from that used by HTLV-1
p12
I. Nevertheless, despite the apparent differences in the
mechanisms of calcium regulation between HTLV-1 p12
I and HIV
Nef, the two accessory proteins apparently play a critical role
in enhancing viral infectivity in primary lymphocytes by upregulation
of NFAT.

pX ORF II P30II: MODULATOR OF TRANSCRIPTION
The accessory proteins encoded by pX ORF II of HTLV-1 are produced
from two alternatively spliced mRNAs. The larger of the two
proteins, p30
II, is encoded by a doubly spliced message including
the first and second exon of Tax spliced to the splice acceptor
site at position 6478 (
13,
24). An internal methionine codon
in p30
II can be used to produce a smaller protein, p13
II, which
contains the C-terminal 87 amino acids of p30
II. Alternatively,
p13
I can be produced from a singly spliced message by splicing
of the first Tax exon directly to the splice acceptor at position
6875 (
13,
24,
71). Initial studies suggested that ORF II was
dispensable for Tax, Rex, or Env expression, as well as viral
replication and immortalization of primary lymphocytes in vitro
(
37,
107,
108). In addition, Chou et al. (
21) described the
isolation of a viral clone from leukemic cells that contained
a premature stop codon in pX ORF II. They concluded that pX
ORF II was not necessary for the outgrowth of leukemic clones
in vivo but could not rule out a function for pX ORF II during
early infection. To specifically test the functional role of
pX ORF II in viral replication in vivo, we inoculated rabbits
with lethally irradiated cell lines expressing the wild-type
molecular clone of HTLV-1 (ACH) and a clone containing selected
mutations in pX ORF II (ACH.p30/13) (
12). While all ACH-inoculated
rabbits became infected as early as 2 weeks postinoculation,
ACH.p30/13-inoculated animals failed to become infected or maintained
low proviral copy numbers in their blood leukocytes. These animals
also had weak and transient ex vivo p19 antigen production from
their PBMC cultures and anti-HTLV-1 antibody titers that declined
towards the end of the study. Most strikingly, using quantitative
competitive PCR, we demonstrated a dramatically reduced (up
to 100-fold) viral load for the ACH.p30/13-infected animals
(
4,
12). Taken together, these data suggested that pX ORF II
is indeed necessary for maintenance of high viral loads in vivo.
Several lines of evidence indicate that p30II acts as a transcription factor. Importantly, the protein localizes to the nucleus, specifically the nucleolus of cells transiently transfected with a p30II expression vector (71, 130). Amino acids 71 to 98 of p30II are able to functionally substitute for the NLS of Rex (32). Furthermore, p30II contains serine/threonine-rich regions that share distant homology to the activation domain of cellular transcription factors, such as Oct-1/2, Pit-1, and POU-1 (24) (Fig. 2). Functionally p30II behaves like a transcription factor and differentially modulates CREB-responsive (CRE) promoters in transient-transfection reporter gene assays (130). Preliminary mutational analysis implicated a central core region within p30II (amino acids 62 to 132) that may mediate the transcriptional enhancement observed. Interestingly, while repressing CRE-mediated transcription, at low concentrations p30II activated viral Tax-responsive-element-dependent transcription independently of Tax expression (130). Recent molecular analyses of transcriptional regulation by p30II showed that the viral protein colocalizes with p300 in cell nuclei and regulates gene expression by binding to the KIX domain of CBP/p300 (129). Furthermore, p30II was able to disrupt CREB-Tax-CBP/p300 complexes bound to the viral 21-bp repeats. Taken together, these data suggest that p30II acts as a repressor of transcription by sequestering CBP/p300 from the pool of available transcription factors. Therefore, at higher concentrations p30II may serve to promote viral persistence by reducing viral gene expression and thus reducing immune recognition of infected cells. It will be important for future studies to define relevant p30II target genes and perhaps yet-unidentified direct p30II-responsive DNA elements. These may include promoters of genes critical for T-cell function, such as the IL-2 promoter, which contains Oct-1-responsive elements (87). In addition, further structure-function analyses will help define the roles of five lysine residues within the transactivation domain of p30II. Intriguingly, these five residues are all preceded by at least one serine residue (SK motif) and thus present potential acetylation sites for CBP/p300. As CBP/p300-mediated acetylation has become a common theme for regulation of protein function (16), it will be interesting to test whether the intrinsic histone acetyltransferase activity of CBP/p300 can in fact function to acetylate and potentially regulate HTLV-1 p30II. While p30II acetylation remains to be evaluated, p30II may function to directly inhibit acetylation of histone H3 and H4, as well as lysine 320 (K320) of the cell cycle regulator p53 through the p300/CBP-associated factor (R. Harrod and G. Franchini, unpublished observation).

MITOCHONDRIA: TARGET OF pX ORF II P13II
Less is known about the function of the smaller protein, p13
II,
encoded by pX ORF II. Initial studies demonstrated p13
II localization
to the nucleus (
71), but more-recent reports show mitochondrial
localization of the protein (
25,
33,
34). This localization
is mediated by an atypical mitochondrial targeting sequence
(MTS) in the N terminus of p13
II (Fig
2). The 10-amino-acid
MTS also targets green fluorescent protein to mitochondria when
fused to the N terminus of green fluorescent protein (
25). Importantly,
a fusion protein of the p13
II MTS with HIV Rev can localize
to mitochondria, indicating that the p13
II MTS is, at least
in part, able to override the potent NLS of Rev (
34). Functionally,
expression of p13
II alters mitochondrial morphology and disrupts
the mitochondrial inner membrane potential, suggesting a role
for p13
II in induction of apoptosis (
25). Intriguingly, proteins
that localize to mitochondria have been described for other
human viruses including Vpr and Tat of HIV, vMIA of human cytomegalovirus,
and BHRF-1 of Epstein-Barr virus (
11,
40). The retroviral proteins
Vpr and Tat of HIV have been shown to disrupt mitochondrial
inner membrane potential, resulting in rapid swelling of mitochondria
and release of cytochrome
c (
58). At this point the biological
significance of p13
II mitochondrial localization and disruption
of membrane potentials remains unclear. Thus far, it has not
been demonstrated that p13
II indeed induces apoptosis, leaving
open the possibility for other mitochondrion-based functions
of the viral protein. Such functions could simply include an
increased respiratory activity of mitochondria, which is often
accompanied by swelling. Thus, p13
II may facilitate later stages
of HTLV-1 infection such as assembly and release. Furthermore,
while screening a cDNA library from an HTLV-1-infected rabbit
cell line by
Saccharomyces cerevisiae two-hybrid assay, Hou
et al. (
57) discovered the association of p13
II with two novel
cellular proteins designated C44 and C254. While C254 appears
to be rabbit actin-binding protein 280, C44 shares homology
with archeal adenylate kinases, the eukaryotic homologues of
which localize to mitochondria. Interestingly, the human homologue
of C44 is expressed in the Jurkat T-cell line and proliferating,
but not resting, PBMC (
57). The implications of this finding
remain unclear but allow speculation about a potential role
of p13
II in cellular activation. Furthermore, Mahana et al.
(
80) reported an increase in Vav phosphorylation in rabbit cells
transfected with an HTLV-1 molecular clone that contains two
mutations in pX ORF II, resulting in expression of truncated
p13
II and p30
II. Vav is a hematopoietically restricted guanine
nucleotide exchange factor for the Rac/Rho family of GTPases
and is necessary for T-cell activation (
92). These findings
suggest that p13
II may play a role in controlling the activation
state of Vav, which may relate to viral infectivity and leukemogenesis.

ACCESSORY GENE PRODUCTS OF RELATED DELTARETROVIRUSES: PARALLEL ROLES IN INFECTIVITY AND PATHOGENESIS
Examination of the genome sequence of HTLV-2, simian T-cell
lymphotropic virus, and BLV reveals genes and conserved organizational
structure similar to those of HTLV-1 (
17,
51,
89,
109,
111,
113,
115,
121). While recent molecular and epidemiological studies
have expanded knowledge of the number of strains of each of
these viruses, HTLV-1, HTLV-2, and BLV belong to a class of
complex pathogenic retroviruses all associated with lymphoproliferative
diseases (
7,
67,
118,
122). Each of these viruses encodes conserved
regulatory and accessory genes from pX region ORFs in the 3'
portion of the viral genome. The availability of infectious
molecular clones of HTLV-2 and BLV has provided important findings
that substantiate the role of homologous gene products in the
pathogenesis of these other members of the deltaretroviruses.
HTLV-2 shares 60% amino acid identity with HTLV-1, and infection by this highly related virus is associated, albeit less frequently than HTLV-1, with leukemia and neurologic disease (116). Because each of these viruses shares genome structures and in vitro biological properties, HTLV-2 remains an important model for the dissection of HTLV pathogenesis. Cockerell et al. (27) reported the first successful infection of rabbits with a molecular clone of HTLV-2. Like work in the HTLV-1 system, it was first reported that deletion of genes between env and the last exon of tax/rex of this HTLV-2 molecular clone had no effect on infectivity of the virus in cell culture systems (50). Subsequently, it was reported by this same research group that this clone had reduced infectivity in the rabbit model system, further verifying the importance of this gene region in infectivity (26). The analogous protein in HTLV-2, compared to HTLV-1 p12I, appears to be p10I, also encoded by pX ORF I. Johnson et al. (60) reported the common property of pX ORF I gene products of HTLV-1 and HTLV-2 to bind MHC-I molecules and perhaps down regulate this important surface protein on infected cells. Thus, like HTLV-1, proteins encoded in the pX region of HTLV-2 are likely to be essential for viral replication during the natural infection. Further studies will be required to determine the role of these accessory genes in the disease syndromes associated with HTLV-2 infections.
BLV infection of sheep offers a reliable model of disease associated with deltaretrovirus infections. Similarly to initial reports of HTLV-1 deletion mutants, BLV molecular clones that disrupted the expression of pX ORF genes, encoding the G4 and R3 accessory proteins, failed to influence virus replication in cell culture systems but reduced the ability of the virus to replicate in sheep (6, 123, 125). The BLV G4 protein shares structural features and cellular distribution patterns with HTLV-1 p13II, while BLV R3 appears to be functionally related more closely to HTLV-1 p12I (L. Willems, personal communication). BLV wild type and mutant proviruses that contained deletions in the G4 or R3 genes infected B lymphocytes and permitted the infected cell to resist apoptotic signals (36). To test the functional properties of the viral proteins, Kerkhofs et al. (62) tested the oncogenic potential of R3 and G4, by determining their ability to transform primary rat embryo fibroblasts. In this system, G4 (analogous to HTLV-1 p13II), but not R3 (analogous to HTLV-1 p12I), cooperated with the Ha-ras oncogene to induce tumors in nude mice. A yeast two-hybrid system, as well as confocal microscopy, was used by Lefebvre et al. (76) to demonstrate that G4 interacts with farnesyl pyrophosphate (FPP) synthetase, an enzyme in the mevalonate/squalene pathway that is critical for synthesis of FPP, a substrate required for prenylation of Ras. Analogously, HTLV-1 p13II was also found to specifically interact with FPP synthetase and to colocalize with G4 in mitochondria. Whether these observations explain the function of G4 is yet to be determined, but this report illustrates new directions for research in the role of these accessory proteins in signal transduction pathways, leading to cell transformation and potential therapeutic approaches to eliminate virus replication. Interestingly, infectious molecular clones of BLV with mutations in gene regions encoding G4 and R3 were limited in their ability to maintain proviral loads in infected sheep (62). More importantly, while wild-type BLV typically produces lymphosarcomas in the majority of infected sheep during the course of the infection, none out of 13 sheep infected with viruses with mutations in G4 or in R3 and G4 developed disease (62). Whether this diminished pathogenic ability is specifically related to these gene products or a generalized attenuation of replication capacity by the virus has not been resolved. Despite this the BLV model provides an important system to test the potential role of the regulatory and accessory genes in the pathogenesis of the deltaretroviruses.

CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS
Much of the work on HTLV-1-mediated T-cell activation and transformation
has focused on the role of the transcriptional activator Tax,
which potently activates numerous cellular genes involved in
host cell proliferation (
59). The oncogenic potential of Tax
has been demonstrated in animal models, as well as in vitro
transformation assays (
9,
14,
41,
98). Therefore, Tax apparently
may be responsible for many of the required events necessary
for HTLV-1-mediated lymphocyte immortalization. However, it
is uncertain whether Tax aids the virus in establishing persistent
infection within a cell, a prerequisite for basal transcription
of Tax itself. Emerging evidence indicates that while potentially
dispensable for viral replication under activation conditions
in vitro, expression of the accessory proteins encoded by pX
ORFs I and II is critical for efficient HTLV-1 infection in
vivo.
Based on recent findings from our own laboratory and others, we propose a molecular function for the pX ORF I-encoded p12I in HTLV-1-induced T-cell activation (Fig. 3). This calcium-dependent mechanism is independent on and most likely precedes Tax expression during a natural infection. Through this mechanism, p12I could enhance viral transmission to nondividing lymphocytes, most likely by activating target cells during the very early stages of infection through induction of NFAT-dependent gene expression.
Perhaps the most fundamental question about the contribution
of p12
I to HTLV-1 replication is whether the accessory protein
indeed influences events early in the life cycle of the virus,
e.g., prior to integration. Alternatively this accessory protein
could enhance viral expression after integration. It has been
difficult to address this question due to the lack of a reliable
single-round infection assay for HTLV-1. If p12
I does indeed
increase viral infectivity rather than replication, it will
be critical to determine whether p12
I is present in newly infected
cells prior to transcription of viral genes. Interestingly,
HIV Nef, which appears to be functionally homologous, enhances
infectivity during the early stages of the virus replication
cycle (
2,
79,
86,
112,
127). In addition, it has been shown
that about 10 to 100 copies of HIV Nef protein are contained
in HIV particles (
2,
82). If p12
I influences replication rather
than infectivity, this would add another level of complexity,
namely, the seemingly overlapping functions of p12
I and Tax.
Both proteins have been shown to activate pathways involved
in T-cell activation. While p12
I activates NFAT2, Tax has been
reported to induce IL-2 and IL-2R{alpha} expression partly through
NFAT1 transcriptional activity (
14,
48). This apparent redundancy
could be resolved if p12
I and Tax expression were temporally
regulated during the viral replication cycle. For example, p12
I could be expressed before Tax and lower the threshold for full,
Tax-mediated cell activation. This is an attractive model, as
Tax has been shown to up regulate expression from the serum
response element (
59). This leads to synthesis of the AP-1 subunits
c-Fos and c-Jun and would thus provide the synergistic signal
required for p12
I-mediated activation of NFAT-dependent gene
expression. Therefore, a kinetic analysis of the synthesis of
the HTLV-1 regulatory and accessory proteins is necessary.
While less is known about the function of p30II and especially p13II in the viral life cycle, emerging evidence suggests that these proteins may act during later stages of infection to promote viral persistence and potentially aid in virus assembly. It will be interesting to evaluate the effect of single p13II or p30II knockout mutations on the replicative potential of HTLV-1 viral clones in vivo and in vitro. In addition, future studies on the p13II protein will be designed to elucidate whether the mitochondrial swelling observed in the presence of the protein is indicative of p13II-induced apoptosis or increased mitochondrial activity, which may aid during the assembly process of the virus. More detailed structure-function analysis of the p30II protein will help identify the minimal region mediating its transcriptional effects and those involved in regulation of p30II function itself. Findings resulting from such studies will aid in the design of specific p12I, p13II, and p30II functional mutants, which can subsequently be reintroduced into infectious molecular clones. Such detailed mutational analyses will be important in order to test the effect of specific mutations on protein function in the context of the whole virus in vitro or in vivo. In this regard, the BLV system offers the opportunity to test specific mutations of analogous gene regions in a disease model.
In conclusion, emerging evidence indicates that the accessory proteins of HTLV-1, which were once thought to be dispensable for viral replication, are critically involved in viral transmission and propagation and may in fact be multifunctional proteins.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Work performed in our laboratory was supported by National Institutes
of Health grants RR-14324, CA-92009, and CA-70259 (R30) from
the National Cancer Institute awarded through The Ohio State
University, Comprehensive Cancer Center. M. Lairmore is supported
by an Independent Scientist Career Award from the National Institutes
of Health (K02 AI01474). B. Albrecht was sponsored by a Boehringer
Ingelheim Predoctoral Fellowship.
We thank past and present members of the laboratory for their invaluable technical contributions and stimulating discussions. We are indebted to Patrick Green and Kathy Boris-Lawrie for continued collaborative support and constructive comments and to Tim Vojt for preparation of illustrations. We thank all investigators who shared unpublished information.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: The Ohio State University, Center for Retrovirus Research and Department of Veterinary Biosciences, 1925 Coffey Rd., Columbus, OH 43210. Phone: (614) 292-4489. Fax: (614) 292-6473. E-mail:
lairmore.1{at}osu.edu.

Present address: Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Molecular Pathogenesis Program, Skirball Institute of Biomolecular Medicine, New York University Medical Center, New York, NY 10016. 

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Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews, September 2002, p. 396-406, Vol. 66, No. 3
1092-2172/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MMBR.66.3.396-406.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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