Expression data from human antigen presenting cells expressing HIV-1 Tat alleles and mutants
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ABSTRACT: HIV-1 Tat induces the expression of interferon (IFN)-inducible genes in immature dendritic cells (iDC) in the absence of IFN production. We evaluated how three alleles of Tat and some Tat mutants differ in cellular gene modulation and whether a similar gene induction pattern could be detected by treating cells with IFN’s. The three alleles and mutants, with the exception of mutants TatSF21-47 and TatSF2G48-R57A that do not localize in the nucleous, modulated to different degrees IFN-inducible genes without concomitant induction of IFN’s. The first exon TatSF21-72 and the minimal transactivator TatSF21-58, all induced genes to a significantly greater extent than full-length Tat. The 2nd exon appears to diminish the gene modulation that can be observed when the first exon alone is expressed. To investigate what domain of Tat are critical to the host-pathogen interactions that are Tat-dependent during HIV infection, we evaluated a variety of Tat-mutants and found that in antigen presenting cells, blood-derived myeloid iDC and macrophages, the second exon of Tat reduces innate immunological responses which are maximal when a Single exon Tat is expressed.
ORGANISM(S): Homo sapiens
PROVIDER: GSE42925 | GEO | 2013/06/01
SECONDARY ACCESSION(S): PRJNA183881
REPOSITORIES: GEO
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