Modulation of cellular gene expression of HIV type 1 infection as determined by subtractive hybridization cloning: downregulation of thymosin beta 4 in vitro and in vivo. | Pepdox
Modulation of cellular gene expression of HIV type 1 infection as determined by subtractive hybridization cloning: downregulation of thymosin beta 4 in vitro and in vivo.
AIDS research and human retroviruses1994PMID: 7888207
Chronic infection with HIV-1 has profound effects on host cell growth and function. We used subtractive hybridization cloning to identify genes whose expression is modulated by HIV-1 infection in the T leukemia cell line CEM. The gene encoding thymosin beta 4, a ubiquitous polypeptide associated with hematopoietic differentiation, showed two- to threefold reduced transcription in HIV-1-infected CEM cells and other HIV-1-infected T cells and macrophages in vitro. Solid-phase radioimmunoassay revealed about a threefold decrease in the level of thymosin beta 4 protein in lysates of infected cells. Northern blot analysis of RNA samples from lymphocytes of five AIDS patients reveals an up to fivefold reduction in the level of thymosin beta 4 mRNA. These results indicate that HIV-1 infection may directly influence the expression of certain physiologically important proteins.
Authors
Shahabuddin, M; McKinley, G; Potash, M J; Volsky, D J