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You are here: Home / Teams / Posttranscriptional Regulation in Infection and Oncogenesis - Jalinot/Mocquet / Publications / The leukemogenic activity of TaxHTLV-1 during human alphabeta T cell development.

The leukemogenic activity of TaxHTLV-1 during human alphabeta T cell development.

Melanie Wencker, Louis Gazzolo, and Madeleine Duc Dodon (2009)

Front Biosci (Schol Ed), 1:194-204.

The regulatory Tax protein of HTLV-1 (Human T-cell Leukaemia Virus type 1) is critically involved in the initiation of ATL (adult T-cell leukaemia). Indeed, Tax provides infected T-cells with a growth advantage and with the potential to get transformed through the deregulation of cell-cycle progression and the acquisition of genetic alterations. Considering that leukemias are induced by disturbances in hematopoietic cells development, we hypothesize that the expression of Tax in human immature thymocytes is a prerequisite to the emergence of ATL cells. Studies of alph abeta T-cell development in the thymus have shown that beta-selection, an early important checkpoint, is regulated by transcription factors that are decisive in the control of cell proliferation, differentiation and survival. Interestingly, Tax is endowed with the ability to interfere with the activity of these transcription factors. We therefore propose that the HTLV-1 infection of these specific target thymocytes leads to a transcriptional deregulation of early alphabeta T cell development, thus inducing a pre-leukemogenic event that favours the subsequent proliferation of ATL cells.

 
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