Tax-Dependent Stimulation of G1Phase-Specific Cyclin-Dependent Kinases and Increased Expression of Signal Transduction Genes Characterize HTLV Type 1-Transformed T Cells

Abstract
Human T cell leukemia virus protein induces T cells to permanent IL-2-dependent growth. These cells occasionally convert to factor independence. The viral oncoprotein Tax acts as an essential growth factor of transformed lymphocytes and stimulates the cell cycle in the G1 phase. In T cells and fibroblasts Tax enhances the activity of the cyclin-dependent kinases (CDK) CDK4 and CDK6. These kinases, which require binding to cyclin D isotypes for their activity, control the G1 phase. Coimmunoprecipitation from these cells revealed that Tax associates with cyclin D3/CDK6, suggesting a direct activation of this kinase. The CDK stimulation may account in part for the mitogenic Tax effect, which causes IL-2-dependent T cell growth by Tax. To address the conversion to IL-2-independent proliferation and to identify overexpressed genes, which contribute to the transformed growth, the gene expression patterns of HTLV-1-transformed T cells were compared with that of peripheral blood lymphocytes. Potentially overexpressed cDNAs were cloned, sequenced, and used to determine the RNA expression. Genes found to be up-regulated are involved in signal transduction (STAT5a, cyclin G1, c-fgr, hPGT) and also glycoprotein synthesis (LDLC, ribophorin). Many of these are also activated during T cell activation and implicated in the regulation of growth and apoptosis. The transcription factor STAT5a, which is involved in IL-2 signaling, was strongly up-regulated only in IL-2-independent cells, thus suggesting that it contributes to factor-independent growth. Thus, the differentially expressed genes could cooperate with the Tax-induced cell cycle stimulation in the maintenance of IL-2-dependent and IL-2-independent growth of HTLV-transformed lymphocytes.