
ISIS Report 15/06/09
CAULIFLOWER MOSAIC VIRUS THAT IS USED IN ALL
GENETICALLY MODIFIED PLANTS AND COULD LEAD TO DISEASE IN
HUMANS IF IT SUCCEEDS TO TRANSFER TO THE HUMAN ORGANISM:
New Evidence Links CaMV 35S Promoter
to HIV Transcription
The controversial promoter in all GM crops does
enhance multiplication of disease-causing viruses; yet
another reason why [1] GM
is Dangerous and Futile (SiS 40). Dr. Mae-Wan
Ho and Prof. Joe
Cummins
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The CaMV 35S
promoter that should never have been used
The cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) was the first
plant virus found to contain DNA instead of RNA as
genetic material [2]. The CaMV 35S promoter was exploited
extensively to drive the expression of foreign genes in
transgenic plants, so much so that it is present in all
genetically modified (GM) crops commercially grown today.
In 2000, some six years after the first GM crop was
commercialised, we drew attention to new and old findings
that have been overlooked on the hazards of the CaMV 35S
promoter; including its relationship to hepatitis B virus
(HPV) and human immune deficiency virus (HIV); the
discovery of its recombination hotspot that enhances both
genomic rearrangement and the potential for horizontal
gene transfer and recombination; and far from being
specific for plants, the promoter is promiscuously active
in all kingdoms of living organisms, including animal and
human cells [3-5] (Cauliflower
Mosaic Viral Promoter - A Recipe for Disaster?, Hazards of
Transgenic Plants Containing the Cauliflower Mosaic Viral
Promoter, CaMV
35S promoter fragmentation hotspot confirmed, and it is
active in animals , ISIS scientific publications). We
called for all GM crops containing the CaMV 35S promoter
to be withdrawn [3]; and were met with an avalanche of
criticisms, which we answered [4, 5] and abuse which we
largely ignored.
Since then, at least two different research teams have
confirmed that the CaMV 35S promoter is active in animal
and human cells [6, 7]. And new evidence has emerged that
the CaMV 35S promoter specifically induces transcription
factors required for making CaMV and HIV genomes by
reverse transcription [8]. (We thank ISIS member Ingrid
Blank from South Africa for drawing our attention to the
publication.}
The danger is that if the CaMV 35S promoter transfers
into human cells, it would facilitate the transcription
of HIV and activate other disease-causing viruses,
including the human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) that is latent
in high proportions of human populations
CaMV related to HPBV and HIV
CaMV is a pararetrovirus whose DNA genome is
replicated by reverse transcription of an RNA
intermediate. The CaMV genome consists of a circular
double-stranded DNA molecule of ~8kb that forms a mini-chromosome
in the nucleus of the host cell. Phylogenetically, CaMV
belongs to a group of caulimoviruses most closely related
to the hepadnaviruses of animals, which includes the
human hepatitis B virus. The reverse transcriptase of
CaMV, however, is most similar to that of
retrotransposons belonging to the Gypsy group, and also
to that of retroviruses such as HIV [9].
CaMV multiplication depends on specific host
transcription factors
CaMV is transcribed by the host cell RNA polymerase II
(RNAPII) into two major transcripts, the 35S and the 19SRNAs
from their respective promoters. CaMV therefore, relies
on host RNAPII to synthesize its viral RNA templates for
reverse transcription (into more viral genomes) and
translation of its coat and other proteins.
During transcription, the C-terminus of RNAPII is
phosphorylated by cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs). The
CDKs and interacting cyclin T partners form the
transcription elongation factor b (P-TEF-b) complexes
that phosphorylate the RNAPII C-terminal domain to
promote transcription elongation. In Arabidopsis
thaliana, CDKC;1, CDKC;2, and their interacting
cyclin T partners CyCT1:4 and CYCT1:5 are important for
cauliflower mosaic virus infection.
Researchers led by Zhixiang Chen at Purdue University,
West Lafayette, Indiana, in the United States used
knockout mutants of the corresponding genes to
investigate how the different factors affect CaMV
infection [8]. They found that knockout mutants of cdkc:2
and cyct1:5 are highly resistant to CaMV infection,
and the double mutant even more so. (Note: the convention
is to represent the protein in capital letters and the
corresponding genes in small italics.) Infection was
delayed 3 to 4 days relative to wild type in the single
mutants. At ~3 weeks after CaMV inoculation, almost 100
percent of the single mutants developed symptoms, but
only 10 to 20 percent of the double mutant plants had
symptoms, reaching 40 to 50 percent at 4 weeks.
The mutants were not resistant to tobacco mosaic virus
(a RNA virus) or cabbage leaf curl virus, a single-stranded
DNA virus, neither of which replicates through reverse
transcription.
CaMV 35S promoter depends on the same transcription
factors
To test whether CDKC:2 and CYCT1:5 are important for
the viral promoter activity, the researchers transformed
the cdkc:2 and cyct1:5 mutants with a
construct containing a b -glucuronidase (GUS) reporter
gene driven by the CaMV 35S promoter. As controls, the
same reporter gene construct was transformed into the
wild type and also the cyct:2-1 mutant, which
responds normally to CaMV. They looked for GUS gene
expression and transcripts in 10 to 20 percent of
independent wild-type or mutant transformants. The wild
type and cyct;2-1 mutant had an average of ~265
units of GUS activity, and accumulated high levels of GUS
transcripts. The single cdkc:2 and cyct1:5
mutants had ~66 units and correspondingly reduced levels
of GUS transcripts. In the double cdkc:2 and cyct1:5
mutant, GUS activity was further reduced to ~35 units,
and the reduced GUS activity was correlated with very low
levels of GUS transcripts. Thus, CDKC;2 and CYCT1:5 are
required for the high CaMV 35S promoter activity, and
furthermore, they are induced by the CaMV35S promoter.
CaMV 35S promoter induce transcription factors for
HIV and other pathogenic viruses
In humans, P-TEFb is required by HIV-1 for its
transcription and replication [10]. The long terminal
repeat of HIV-1 has minimal promoter activity in the
absence of the viral Tat protein. The CaMV 35S promoter,
on the other hand, is strongly active in plant cells in
the absence of any viral protein [11]. Thus, the
presence of CaMV 35S promoter effectively facilitates the
transcription of HIV and other viruses. A more recent
study reported that human T-lymphotropic virus type 1,
another complex retrovirus, recruits P-TEFb to stimulate
viral gene transcription [12]. No such close link of P-TEFb
has been reported with other animal DNA viruses that also
depend on RNAPII for transcription.
Thus, P-TEFb appears to be an evolutionary conserved
target of complex retroviruses and pararetroviruses for
transcription activation. Although human P-TEFb is not
known to play a crucial role in the transcription of any
human DNA virus, its over-expression in human cells can
greatly activate the in vivo activity of the
cytomegalovirus promoter [13]. Recently, it has been
reported that replication of human cytomegalovirus is
dependent on the cellular protein kinase CDK9 and cyclin
T1 proteins [14]; which are similar respectively to the
CDKC;2 and CYCT1:5 induced by the CaMV 35S promoter.
Within crop plants, the CaMV promoter is well known to
alter the level and patterns of activity of adjacent
tissue and organ-specific gene promoters [15]. In the
absence of the 35S promoter sequence, the AAP2 promoter
is active only in vascular tissue as indicated by the
expression of the AAP2:Gus gene. With the 35S promoter
sequence in the same T-plasmid used to transform tobacco
plants, the resultant transgenic plants exhibit 2-fold to
five-fold increase in AAP2 promoter activity and the
promoter became active in all tissue types. Similar
effects were found on the ovary specific AGL5:iaaM gene,
and ovule- and early embryo-specific PAB5:barnase gene.
In contrast, the NOS promoter did not have such effects.
Thus, the 35S promoter sequence can convert an adjacent
tissue and organic specific gene into a globally active
promoter.
Furthermore, a 60-nucleotide region (S1) downstream of
the transcription start site of the cauliflower mosaic
virus 35S RNA was found to enhance gene expression [16].
The region contains sequence motifs with enhancer
function that re normally masked by the powerful upstream
enhancers of the promoter. A repeated CT-rich motif is
involved both in enhancer function and interaction with
plant nuclear proteins. The SI region can also enhance
expression from heterologous promoters, and the
researchers speculated that this could guarantee a minimal
basal activity of the promoter under every possible
circumstance, and could reflect a fundamental
survival strategy for the virus.
These findings indicate that the CaMV 35S promoter, if
transferred to human cells, could up-regulate specific
transcription factors that will multiply and activate a
number of common viruses that cause diseases including
cancer.
References
- Ho MW. GM is dangerous and futile, we need
organic sustainable food and energy systems now. Science
in Society 40, 4-8, 2008.
- Zaitlin M, Palukaitis P. Advances in
understanding plant viruses and viral diseases
Annu Rev Phytopathol. 2000;38:117-143.
- Ho MW, Ryan A and Cummins J. Cauliflower mosaic
viral promoter a recipe for Disaster? Microbial
Ecology in Health and Disease 1999. 11, 194-7.
http://www.i-sis.org.uk/onlinestore/papers2.php#section5
- Ho MW, Ryan A and Cummins J. Hazards of
transgenic plants with the cauliflower mosaic
viral promoter. Microbial Ecology in Health
and Disease 2000, 12, 6-11. http://www.i-sis.org.uk/onlinestore/papers2.php#section5
- Ho MW, Ryan A and Cummins J. CaMV35S promoter
fragmentation hotspot confirmed and it is active
in animals. Microbial Ecology in Health and
Disease 2000, 12,: 189. http://www.i-sis.org.uk/onlinestore/papers2.php#section5
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