Article

  • The EMBO Journal (2007) 26, 4985 - 4995
  • doi:10.1038/sj.emboj.7601928

Published online: 15 November 2007

CBF-1 promotes transcriptional silencing during the establishment of HIV-1 latency

Mudit Tyagi1 and Jonathan Karn1

  1. Department of Molecular Biology and Microbiology, School of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, USA

Correspondence to:

Jonathan Karn, Department of Molecular Biology and Microbiology, School of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, 10900 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, OH 44106, USA. Tel.: +1 216 368 3915; Fax: +1 216 368 3055; E-mail: jonathan.karn@case.edu

Received 1 June 2007; Accepted 24 October 2007


The establishment of HIV proviral latency requires the creation of repressive chromatin structures that impair the initiation of transcription and restrict RNAP II elongation. We have found that C-promoter binding factor-1 (CBF-1), a CSL (CBF-1, Su(H) and Lag-1)-type transcription factor and key effector of the Notch signaling pathway, is a remarkably potent and specific inhibitor of the HIV-1 LTR promoter. Knockdown of endogenous CBF-1 using specific small hairpin RNAs expressed on lentiviral vectors results in the partial reactivation of latent HIV proviruses, recruitment of RNAP II, loss of histone deacetylases and the concomitant acetylation of histones. An important property of any repressor utilized to establish HIV latency is that it must become displaced or deactivated upon T-cell activation. Consistent with this hypothesis, CBF-1 mRNA and protein levels are highest in quiescent or unstimulated T cells but decline rapidly in response to proliferative stimulation such as activation of the T-cell receptor or treatment with TNF-alpha. We conclude that CBF-1 is a previously overlooked factor that induces transcriptional silencing during the establishment of HIV latency.

  • Keywords:

    • chromatin restriction,
    • histone deacetylases (HDAC),
    • histone methylation,
    • HIV latency,
    • HIV transcription
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