Mouse Mammary Tumor Virus Sequences Responsible for Activating Cellular Oncogenes

AUTOR(ES)
FONTE

American Society for Microbiology

RESUMO

Integration of mouse mammary tumor virus (MMTV) near the int genes results in the inappropriate expression of these proto-oncogenes and initiates events that lead to the formation of mammary adenocarcinomas. In most cases, the MMTV provirus integrates in a transcriptional orientation opposite that of the int genes. We have used a novel, vector-based system designed to recapitulate the integration of MMTV upstream of the int-2 promoter. Compared to a cellular promoter or another retroviral promoter, the MMTV long terminal repeat (LTR) in this configuration is particularly efficacious at activating the int-2 promoter. The sequences responsible for enhancing the activity of the int-2 promoter map to two domains in the 5′ end of the MMTV LTR. One domain is a previously defined element; the second is an element delineated by these studies that acts synergistically with the first. Both of these elements display mammary cell-specific activity. Thus, even though the MMTV promoter itself is weak without hormonal stimulation, viral integration can position the 5′ LTR elements to efficiently activate transcription from cellular proto-oncogenes. Other functional elements in the LTR have little effect on the activation of the int-2 promoter. Even stimulation of the MMTV promoter with steroid hormones only modestly activates transcription from the int-2 promoter, suggesting that the 5′ elements of the LTR are the predominant determinants of the tissue- and orientation-specific activation of cellular promoters by MMTV.

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