Kovacsics Colleen E, Gill Alexander J, Ambegaokar Surendra S, Gelman Benjamin B, Kolson Dennis L
Department of Neurology, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, 19104.
Department of Botany & Microbiology, Robbins Program in Neuroscience, Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, Ohio, 43015.
Glia. 2017 Aug;65(8):1264-1277. doi: 10.1002/glia.23160. Epub 2017 May 22.
Induction of the detoxifying enzyme heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) is a critical protective host response to cellular injury associated with inflammation and oxidative stress. We previously found that HO-1 protein expression is reduced in brains of HIV-infected individuals with HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND) and in HIV-infected macrophages, where this reduction associates with enhanced glutamate release and neurotoxicity. Because HIV-infected macrophages are a small component of the cellular content of the brain, the reduction of macrophage HO-1 expression likely accounts for a small portion of brain HO-1 loss in HIV infection. We therefore investigated the contribution of astrocytes, the major pool of brain HO-1. We identified immunoproteasome-mediated HO-1 degradation in astrocytes as a second possible mechanism of brain HO-1 loss in HIV infection. We demonstrate that prolonged exposure of human fetal astrocytes to interferon-gamma (IFNγ), an HIV-associated CNS immune activator, selectively reduces expression of HO-1 protein without a concomitant reduction in HO-1 RNA, increases expression of immunoproteasome subunits, and decreases expression of constitutive proteasome subunits, consistent with a shift towards increased immunoproteasome activity. In HIV-infected brain HO-1 protein reduction also associates with increased HO-1 RNA expression and increased immunoproteasome expression. Finally, we show that IFNγ treatment of astrocytic cells reduces HO-1 protein half-life in a proteasome-dependent manner. Our data thus suggest unique causal links among HIV infection, IFNγ-mediated immunoproteasome induction, and enhanced HO-1 degradation, which likely contribute to neurocognitive impairment in HAND. Such IFNγ-mediated HO-1 degradation should be further investigated for a role in neurodegeneration in inflammatory brain conditions.
Kovacsics et al. identify immunoproteasome degradation of heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) in interferon gamma-stimulated astrocytes as a plausible mechanism for the observed loss of HO-1 protein expression in the brains of HIV-infected individuals, which likely contributes to the neurocognitive impairment in HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders.
诱导解毒酶血红素加氧酶-1(HO-1)是机体对与炎症和氧化应激相关的细胞损伤的一种关键保护性反应。我们先前发现,在患有HIV相关神经认知障碍(HAND)的HIV感染者的大脑以及HIV感染的巨噬细胞中,HO-1蛋白表达降低,这种降低与谷氨酸释放增加和神经毒性增强有关。由于HIV感染的巨噬细胞只是大脑细胞成分的一小部分,巨噬细胞HO-1表达的降低可能仅占HIV感染时大脑HO-1损失的一小部分。因此,我们研究了大脑HO-1的主要来源星形胶质细胞的作用。我们确定免疫蛋白酶体介导的星形胶质细胞中HO-1的降解是HIV感染时大脑HO-1损失的第二种可能机制。我们证明,人胎儿星形胶质细胞长时间暴露于干扰素-γ(IFNγ),一种与HIV相关的中枢神经系统免疫激活剂,会选择性降低HO-1蛋白的表达,而HO-1 RNA却没有相应减少,增加免疫蛋白酶体亚基的表达,并降低组成型蛋白酶体亚基的表达,这与免疫蛋白酶体活性增加的转变一致。在HIV感染的大脑中,HO-1蛋白的减少也与HO-1 RNA表达增加和免疫蛋白酶体表达增加有关。最后,我们表明IFNγ处理星形胶质细胞会以蛋白酶体依赖性方式降低HO-1蛋白的半衰期。因此,我们的数据表明HIV感染、IFNγ介导的免疫蛋白酶体诱导和HO-1降解增强之间存在独特的因果关系,这可能导致HAND中的神经认知障碍。这种IFNγ介导的HO-1降解在炎症性脑部疾病的神经退行性变中的作用应进一步研究。
科瓦西克斯等人确定干扰素γ刺激的星形胶质细胞中血红素加氧酶-1(HO-1)的免疫蛋白酶体降解是HIV感染者大脑中观察到的HO-1蛋白表达丧失的一种合理机制,这可能导致HIV相关神经认知障碍中的神经认知损害。