1. Academic Validation
  2. Activity of the dietary antioxidant ergothioneine in a virus gene-based assay for inhibitors of HIV transcription

Activity of the dietary antioxidant ergothioneine in a virus gene-based assay for inhibitors of HIV transcription

  • Biofactors. 2006;27(1-4):157-65. doi: 10.1002/biof.5520270114.
Lianchun Xiao 1 Lijun Zhao Ting Li Diane K Hartle Okezie I Aruoma Ethan Will Taylor
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Sciences, College of Pharmacy, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602, USA.
Abstract

The "Long Terminal Repeat" (LTR) of HIV-1 is the target of cellular transcription factors such as NF-kappaB, and serves as the promoter-enhancer for the viral genome when integrated in host DNA. Various LTR-reporter gene constructs have been used for in vitro studies of activators or inhibitors of HIV-1 transcription, e.g., to show that antioxidants such as lipoic acid and selenium inhibit NF-kappaB-dependent HIV-1 LTR activation. One such construct is the pHIVlacZ plasmid, with the HIV-1 LTR driving expression of the lacZ gene (encoding beta-galactosidase, beta-gal). Typically, for inhibitor screening, cells transfected with pHIVlacZ are activated using tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), and the colorimetric o-nitrophenol assay is used to assess changes in beta-gal activity. A variant of this assay was developed as described here, in which LTR activation was induced by pro-fs, a novel HIV-1 gene product encoded via a -1 frameshift from the Protease gene. Cotransfection of cells with pHIVlacZ along with a pro-fs construct produced a significant increase in beta-gal activity over controls. L-ergothioneine dose dependently inhibited both TNF-alpha-mediated and pro-fs-mediated increases in beta-gal activity, with an IC50 of about 6 mM. Thus antioxidant strategy involving ergothioneine derived from food Plants might be of benefit in chronic immunodeficiency diseases.

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