Article révisé par les pairs
Résumé : The IFI-56K and IFI-54K genes are transcriptionally stimulated when cells are treated by interferon. We have previously shown that the IFI-56K gene is in addition directly induced by poly(rI)·poly(rC), and inducer of interferon-β. Since the regulation of the IFI-56K and IFI-54K genes by interferon are very much alike, we tested whether the IFI-54K gene is also directly regulated by poly(rI)·poly(rC). Treatment of various cell lines with poly(rI)·poly(rC) leads to a clear accumulation of the IFI-54K mRNA to a level which sometimes even exceeds that obtained with high doses of interferon. Several interferon-resistant cell lines were investigated for the inducibility of both the IFI-56K and IFI-54K genes by interferons, poly(rI)·poly(rC) and viruses (which are the natural inducers of interferon-α and -β). Both genes appear to be coordinately regulated by these inducers. It was thus interesting to search for common regulatory element(s) in the control region of these two genes. The IFI-54K gene promoter region was isolated, from which a 520-base-pair segment was sequenced and compared with the promoter region of the IFI-56K gene that we had previously sequenced. The only homology found is a well conserved 19-bp segment located just upstream of the TATA box of these genes; interestingly, this sequence is also homologous to the minimal region needed for the inducibility by poly(rI)·poly(rC) of the interferon-β gene. This conserved sequence might be responsible for the coordinate induction of the IFI-56K and IFI-54K genes by interferon, poly(rI)·poly(rC) and viruses.