[Frontiers in Bioscience 15, 537-549, January 1, 2010]

WHAT do viruses BET on?

Magdalena Weidner-Glunde1, Matthias Ottinger2, Thomas F.Schulz1

1Hannover Medical School, Institute of Virology, Hannover, Germany, 2Harvard Medical School, Department of Pathology, Boston, USA

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1. Abstract
2. Introduction
3. BET proteins
3.1. Brd2/RING3
3.2. Brd4/HUNK-1/MCAP
4. BET proteins and viruses
4.1. Brd4 and papillomavirus
4.2. BET proteins and KSHV
4.3. BET proteins and other herpesviruses
4.4. BET proteins and retroviruses
5. Concluding remarks
6. Acknowledgements
7. References

1. ABSTRACT

The bromodomain and ET domain (BET) proteins belong to a group of bromodomain proteins and bind acetylated histones. Two of the currently known members of this protein family were implicated in transcriptional regulation. The two most studied BET proteins Brd2 and Brd4 have been shown to bind to viral proteins of herpesviruses and papillomaviruses. These pathogens often take advantage of the cellular function of the BET proteins and exploit it for their own purposes. In some cases though, viral proteins were shown to adapt BET proteins to new virus specific functions. Additionally some retroviruses seem to encode proteins that mimic Brd4 functions and hijack Brd4-associated protein complexes to use them for their own transcription.