Carroll Virginia A, Lafferty Mark K, Marchionni Luigi, Bryant Joseph L, Gallo Robert C, Garzino-Demo Alfredo
Institute of Human Virology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21201.
Department of Oncology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21205.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Nov 15;113(46):13168-13173. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1615258113. Epub 2016 Oct 31.
HIV-1 infection is associated with increased risk for B-cell lymphomas. How HIV infection promotes the development of lymphoma is unclear, but it may involve chronic B-cell activation, inflammation, and/or impaired immunity, possibly leading to a loss of control of oncogenic viruses and reduced tumor immunosurveillance. We hypothesized that HIV structural proteins may contribute to lymphomagenesis directly, because they can persist long term in lymph nodes in the absence of viral replication. The HIV-1 transgenic mouse Tg26 carries a noninfectious HIV-1 provirus lacking part of the gag-pol region, thus constituting a model for studying the effects of viral products in pathogenesis. Approximately 15% of Tg26 mice spontaneously develop leukemia/lymphoma. We investigated which viral proteins are associated with the development of leukemia/lymphoma in the Tg26 mouse model, and performed microarray analysis on RNA from spleen and lymph nodes to identify potential mechanisms of lymphomagenesis. Of the viral proteins examined, only expression of HIV-1 matrix protein p17 was associated with leukemia/lymphoma development and was highly expressed in bone marrow before disease. The tumor cells resembled pro-B cells, and were CD19IgMIgDCD93CD43CD21CD23VpreBCXCR4 Consistent with the pro-B-cell stage of B-cell development, microarray analysis revealed enrichment of transcripts, including Rag1, Rag2, CD93, Vpreb1, Vpreb3, and Igll1 We confirmed RAG1 expression in Tg26 tumors, and hypothesized that HIV-1 matrix protein p17 may directly induce RAG1 in B cells. Stimulation of human activated B cells with p17 enhanced RAG1 expression in three of seven donors, suggesting that intracellular signaling by p17 may lead to genomic instability and transformation.
HIV-1感染与B细胞淋巴瘤风险增加有关。HIV感染如何促进淋巴瘤的发展尚不清楚,但可能涉及慢性B细胞活化、炎症和/或免疫受损,这可能导致对致癌病毒的控制丧失和肿瘤免疫监视功能降低。我们推测HIV结构蛋白可能直接促成淋巴瘤的发生,因为在没有病毒复制的情况下它们可以长期存在于淋巴结中。HIV-1转基因小鼠Tg26携带一种缺乏部分gag-pol区域的非感染性HIV-1前病毒,因此构成了一个研究病毒产物在发病机制中作用的模型。大约15%的Tg26小鼠会自发发生白血病/淋巴瘤。我们研究了哪些病毒蛋白与Tg26小鼠模型中白血病/淋巴瘤的发生有关,并对来自脾脏和淋巴结的RNA进行了微阵列分析,以确定淋巴瘤发生的潜在机制。在所检测的病毒蛋白中,只有HIV-1基质蛋白p17的表达与白血病/淋巴瘤的发生有关,并且在疾病发生前在骨髓中高表达。肿瘤细胞类似于前B细胞,并且是CD19IgMIgDCD93CD43CD21CD23VpreBCXCR4。与B细胞发育的前B细胞阶段一致,微阵列分析显示包括Rag1、Rag2、CD93、Vpreb1、Vpreb3和Igll1在内的转录本富集。我们在Tg26肿瘤中证实了RAG1的表达,并推测HIV-1基质蛋白p17可能直接在B细胞中诱导RAG1。用p17刺激人活化B细胞在7名供体中的3名中增强了RAG1的表达,表明p17的细胞内信号传导可能导致基因组不稳定和转化。