Genomic instability is a hallmark of many cancers; however, the molecular etiology of chromosomal dysregulation is not well understood. The human T-cell leukemia virus type-1 (HTLV-1) oncoprotein Tax activates NF-κB-signaling and induces DNA-damage and aberrant chromosomal segregation through diverse mechanisms which contribute to viral carcinogenesis. Intriguingly, Stathmin/oncoprotein-18 (Op-18) depolymerizes tubulin and interacts with the p65RelA subunit and functions as a cofactor for NF-κB-dependent transactivation. We thus hypothesized that the dissociation of p65RelA-Stathmin/Op-18 complexes by Tax could lead to the catastrophic destabilization of microtubule (MT) spindle fibers during mitosis and provide a novel mechanistic link between NF-κB-signaling and genomic instability. Here we report that the inhibition of Stathmin expression by the retroviral latency protein, p30II, or knockdown with siRNA- stathmin , dampens Tax-mediated NF-κB transactivation and counters Tax-induced genomic instability and cytotoxicity. The Tax-G148V mutant, defective for NF-κB activation, exhibited reduced p65RelA-Stathmin binding and diminished genomic instability and cytotoxicity. Dominant-negative inhibitors of NF-κB also prevented Tax-induced multinucleation and apoptosis. Moreover, cell clones containing the infectious HTLV-1 ACH. p30II mutant provirus, impaired for p30II production, exhibited increased multinucleation and the accumulation of cytoplasmic tubulin aggregates following nocodozole-treatment. These findings allude to a mechanism whereby NF-κB-signaling regulates tubulin dynamics and mitotic instability through the modulation of p65RelA-Stathmin/Op-18 interactions, and support the notion that p30II enhances the survival of Tax-expressing HTLV-1-transformed cells. Image 1 • NF-B-signaling by the HTLV-1 Tax oncoprotein induces genomic instability and apoptosis. • Tax dissociates molecular interactions between the NF-•B p65RelA subunit and Stathmin. • The HTLV-1 latency protein p30II represses Stathmin and counters Tax-induced cytotoxicity. • Repression of Stathmin destabilizes p65RelA and inhibits Tax-induced NF-•B transactivation. • p30II promotes the survival of HTLV-1+ cells by inhibiting Tax-induced mitotic catastrophe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]