Splicing-dependent restriction of the HBZ gene by Tax underlies biphasic HTLV-1 infection.

Tax 对 HBZ 基因的剪接依赖性限制是 HTLV-1 双相感染的基础

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作者:Liang Yi, Lyu Chenyang, Xu Shuwen, Tan Chenxin, Jiang Qian, Liu Benquan, Yang Sikai, Huang Weijia, Zhou Ruoning, Yuan Xiaoyi, Zuo Xiaorui, Matsuoka Masao, Ma Guangyong
HTLV-1 is an oncovirus that encodes a transactivator Tax and a regulatory gene HBZ. HTLV-1 early or infectious replication depends on Tax; during HTLV-1 late infection, HBZ plays a crucial role in driving the proliferation of infected cells and maintaining viral persistence. The biphasic replication pattern of HTLV-1 dictated by Tax and HBZ represents a result of viral host adaptation, but how HTLV-1 coordinates Tax and HBZ expression to facilitate early and late infection remains elusive. Here we reveal that HBZ RNA splicing exhibits distinct patterns in Tax+ and Tax- HTLV-1 infected cells. We demonstrate that Tax interacts with the host spliceosome and inhibits HBZ splicing by competitively binding splicing factors including WDR83 and GPATCH1. As a result, Tax confers a natural constraint on HBZ, counterbalancing its anti-replication effect at HTLV-1 early infection, while unleashing HBZ to drive HTLV-1 mitotic propagation during late infection. The splicing-dependent restriction of HBZ by Tax thus represents a critical interplay central to HTLV-1 persistence.

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