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Interferon-α Subtypes in an Ex Vivo Model of Acute HIV-1 Infection: Expression, Potency and Effector Mechanisms

HIV-1 is transmitted primarily across mucosal surfaces and rapidly spreads within the intestinal mucosa during acute infection. The type I interferons (IFNs) likely serve as a first line of defense, but the relative expression and antiviral properties of the 12 IFNα subtypes against HIV-1 infection...

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Autores principales: Harper, Michael S., Guo, Kejun, Gibbert, Kathrin, Lee, Eric J., Dillon, Stephanie M., Barrett, Bradley S., McCarter, Martin D., Hasenkrug, Kim J., Dittmer, Ulf, Wilson, Cara C., Santiago, Mario L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4631339/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26529416
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1005254
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author Harper, Michael S.
Guo, Kejun
Gibbert, Kathrin
Lee, Eric J.
Dillon, Stephanie M.
Barrett, Bradley S.
McCarter, Martin D.
Hasenkrug, Kim J.
Dittmer, Ulf
Wilson, Cara C.
Santiago, Mario L.
author_facet Harper, Michael S.
Guo, Kejun
Gibbert, Kathrin
Lee, Eric J.
Dillon, Stephanie M.
Barrett, Bradley S.
McCarter, Martin D.
Hasenkrug, Kim J.
Dittmer, Ulf
Wilson, Cara C.
Santiago, Mario L.
author_sort Harper, Michael S.
collection PubMed
description HIV-1 is transmitted primarily across mucosal surfaces and rapidly spreads within the intestinal mucosa during acute infection. The type I interferons (IFNs) likely serve as a first line of defense, but the relative expression and antiviral properties of the 12 IFNα subtypes against HIV-1 infection of mucosal tissues remain unknown. Here, we evaluated the expression of all IFNα subtypes in HIV-1-exposed plasmacytoid dendritic cells by next-generation sequencing. We then determined the relative antiviral potency of each IFNα subtype ex vivo using the human intestinal Lamina Propria Aggregate Culture model. IFNα subtype transcripts from the centromeric half of the IFNA gene complex were highly expressed in pDCs following HIV-1 exposure. There was an inverse relationship between IFNA subtype expression and potency. IFNα8, IFNα6 and IFNα14 were the most potent in restricting HIV-1 infection. IFNα2, the clinically-approved subtype, and IFNα1 were both highly expressed but exhibited relatively weak antiviral activity. The relative potencies correlated with binding affinity to the type I IFN receptor and the induction levels of HIV-1 restriction factors Mx2 and Tetherin/BST-2 but not APOBEC3G, F and D. However, despite the lack of APOBEC3 transcriptional induction, the higher relative potency of IFNα8 and IFNα14 correlated with stronger inhibition of virion infectivity, which is linked to deaminase-independent APOBEC3 restriction activity. By contrast, both potent (IFNα8) and weak (IFNα1) subtypes significantly induced HIV-1 GG-to-AG hypermutation. The results unravel non-redundant functions of the IFNα subtypes against HIV-1 infection, with strong implications for HIV-1 mucosal immunity, viral evolution and IFNα-based functional cure strategies.
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spelling pubmed-46313392015-11-13 Interferon-α Subtypes in an Ex Vivo Model of Acute HIV-1 Infection: Expression, Potency and Effector Mechanisms Harper, Michael S. Guo, Kejun Gibbert, Kathrin Lee, Eric J. Dillon, Stephanie M. Barrett, Bradley S. McCarter, Martin D. Hasenkrug, Kim J. Dittmer, Ulf Wilson, Cara C. Santiago, Mario L. PLoS Pathog Research Article HIV-1 is transmitted primarily across mucosal surfaces and rapidly spreads within the intestinal mucosa during acute infection. The type I interferons (IFNs) likely serve as a first line of defense, but the relative expression and antiviral properties of the 12 IFNα subtypes against HIV-1 infection of mucosal tissues remain unknown. Here, we evaluated the expression of all IFNα subtypes in HIV-1-exposed plasmacytoid dendritic cells by next-generation sequencing. We then determined the relative antiviral potency of each IFNα subtype ex vivo using the human intestinal Lamina Propria Aggregate Culture model. IFNα subtype transcripts from the centromeric half of the IFNA gene complex were highly expressed in pDCs following HIV-1 exposure. There was an inverse relationship between IFNA subtype expression and potency. IFNα8, IFNα6 and IFNα14 were the most potent in restricting HIV-1 infection. IFNα2, the clinically-approved subtype, and IFNα1 were both highly expressed but exhibited relatively weak antiviral activity. The relative potencies correlated with binding affinity to the type I IFN receptor and the induction levels of HIV-1 restriction factors Mx2 and Tetherin/BST-2 but not APOBEC3G, F and D. However, despite the lack of APOBEC3 transcriptional induction, the higher relative potency of IFNα8 and IFNα14 correlated with stronger inhibition of virion infectivity, which is linked to deaminase-independent APOBEC3 restriction activity. By contrast, both potent (IFNα8) and weak (IFNα1) subtypes significantly induced HIV-1 GG-to-AG hypermutation. The results unravel non-redundant functions of the IFNα subtypes against HIV-1 infection, with strong implications for HIV-1 mucosal immunity, viral evolution and IFNα-based functional cure strategies. Public Library of Science 2015-11-03 /pmc/articles/PMC4631339/ /pubmed/26529416 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1005254 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Harper, Michael S.
Guo, Kejun
Gibbert, Kathrin
Lee, Eric J.
Dillon, Stephanie M.
Barrett, Bradley S.
McCarter, Martin D.
Hasenkrug, Kim J.
Dittmer, Ulf
Wilson, Cara C.
Santiago, Mario L.
Interferon-α Subtypes in an Ex Vivo Model of Acute HIV-1 Infection: Expression, Potency and Effector Mechanisms
title Interferon-α Subtypes in an Ex Vivo Model of Acute HIV-1 Infection: Expression, Potency and Effector Mechanisms
title_full Interferon-α Subtypes in an Ex Vivo Model of Acute HIV-1 Infection: Expression, Potency and Effector Mechanisms
title_fullStr Interferon-α Subtypes in an Ex Vivo Model of Acute HIV-1 Infection: Expression, Potency and Effector Mechanisms
title_full_unstemmed Interferon-α Subtypes in an Ex Vivo Model of Acute HIV-1 Infection: Expression, Potency and Effector Mechanisms
title_short Interferon-α Subtypes in an Ex Vivo Model of Acute HIV-1 Infection: Expression, Potency and Effector Mechanisms
title_sort interferon-α subtypes in an ex vivo model of acute hiv-1 infection: expression, potency and effector mechanisms
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4631339/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26529416
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1005254
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