*Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Digestive Diseases, University of Cincinnati Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH; and †Division of Asthma Research, Department of Pediatrics, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH.
J Acquir Immune Defic Syndr. 2014 Jan 1;65(1):19-26. doi: 10.1097/QAI.0b013e3182a1bca4.
HIV-1 modulates host cell epigenetic machinery to control its own replication and induce immune suppression. HIV-1 infection leads to activation of T regulatory cell (T(reg)), but the mechanism underlying this immune modulation is unclear. T(reg) plays a prominent role in gut-mucosal immune tolerance by restraining excessive effector T-cell responses, a mechanism that is known to be disturbed in chronic HIV-1 infection. DNA methylation plays a major role in T(reg) lineage commitment and immune homeostasis, which may be regulated by HIV. To investigate the mechanisms of aberrant methylation of the T(reg) marker FOXP3 in HIV-1 infection, we evaluated the expression pattern of methylation-related enzymes and its correlation to FOXP3 methylation.
FOXP3 promoter methylation in the colon mucosa and peripheral blood from HIV-infected patients and control subjects was measured using Pyrosequencing. Gene expression pattern of DNA methylation enzymes in the colon mucosa was investigated by Microarray and quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction analysis in the same subjects.
FOXP3 promoter was significantly (P ≤ 0.0001) demethylated in HIV-infected patients compared with control subjects in both tissues. Expression of DNA methyltransferase 1 (DNAMT1), DNA methyltransferase 1-associated protein 1(DMAP1), methyltransferase-like 7B (METTL7B), and methyltransferase-like 10 (METTL10) were significantly down regulated in HIV-infected patients compared with controls and had a significant positive correlation to FOXP3 promoter methylation.
We present evidence suggesting that altered methylation pattern of FOXP3 and accordingly higher T(reg) frequency in gut mucosa of HIV-infected patients may be because of aberrant methylation processing in HIV.
HIV-1 调节宿主细胞表观遗传机制来控制自身复制并诱导免疫抑制。HIV-1 感染导致调节性 T 细胞(Treg)的激活,但这种免疫调节的机制尚不清楚。Treg 通过抑制过度的效应 T 细胞反应在肠道黏膜免疫耐受中发挥重要作用,而这种机制在慢性 HIV-1 感染中被认为是紊乱的。DNA 甲基化在 Treg 谱系的分化和免疫稳态中起着重要作用,这可能受到 HIV 的调控。为了研究 HIV-1 感染中 Treg 标志物 FOXP3 异常甲基化的机制,我们评估了与甲基化相关的酶的表达模式及其与 FOXP3 甲基化的相关性。
采用焦磷酸测序法检测 HIV 感染患者和对照者结肠黏膜和外周血中 FOXP3 启动子的甲基化。通过微阵列和定量逆转录聚合酶链反应分析,在同一受试者中研究了结肠黏膜中 DNA 甲基化酶的基因表达模式。
与对照组相比,HIV 感染患者的 FOXP3 启动子在两种组织中均显著(P≤0.0001)去甲基化。与对照组相比,HIV 感染患者的 DNA 甲基转移酶 1(DNAMT1)、DNA 甲基转移酶 1 相关蛋白 1(DMAP1)、甲基转移酶样蛋白 7B(METTL7B)和甲基转移酶样蛋白 10(METTL10)的表达显著下调,且与 FOXP3 启动子甲基化呈显著正相关。
我们提供的证据表明,HIV 感染患者肠道黏膜中 FOXP3 的甲基化模式改变和相应的 Treg 频率升高可能是由于 HIV 异常的甲基化处理。