HIV-1 gene expression is regulated by the interplay of transcription factors with multiple binding motifs present within the U3, R and U5 regions of the long terminal repeat (LTR). Here we report novel DNA binding complexes (termed 9a, 9b and 9c) between nuclear proteins from T-lymphoid and non-T-lymphoid cells and a region of the U3 LTR between nucleotides (nts) -320 to -281 in the HIV strain HXB2. Complex 9b bound a motif predicted to bind E-box or c-Myb proteins and a partially overlapping dyad symmetrical motif, and included basic helix-loop-helix proteins (E12, E47 or ITF-1) but surprisingly not c-Myb. Complex 9c, which bound to a pair of GATA sites, included GATA-3 and GATA-4 in Jurkat and MT-2 cells, respectively. We also demonstrate that the c-Myb/E-box and GATA sites form a bipartite motif required for the formation of complex 9a. Transient transfection experiments with T cells revealed that in the context of a minichromosome assembled full-length LTR, mutation of region -320 to -281 increased basal and PMA-stimulated LTR activity. These findings suggest that this region is an important component of the HIV-1 LTR required for response to different cellular transcription factors.
Copyright 2002 National Science Council, ROC and S. Karger AG, Basel