Valle-Casuso Jose Carlos, Allouch Awatef, David Annie, Lenzi Gina M, Studdard Lydia, Barré-Sinoussi Françoise, Müller-Trutwin Michaela, Kim Baek, Pancino Gianfranco, Sáez-Cirión Asier
Institut Pasteur, Unité HIV Inflammation et Persistance, Paris, France.
Institut Pasteur, Unité de Régulation des Infections Rétrovirales, Paris, France.
J Virol. 2017 Nov 14;91(23). doi: 10.1128/JVI.01324-17. Print 2017 Dec 1.
HIV-1 infection of noncycling cells, such as dendritic cells (DCs), is impaired due to limited availability of deoxynucleoside triphosphates (dNTPs), which are needed for HIV-1 reverse transcription. The levels of dNTPs are tightly regulated during the cell cycle and depend on the balance between dNTP biosynthesis and degradation. SAMHD1 potently blocks HIV-1 replication in DCs, although the underlying mechanism is still unclear. SAMHD1 has been reported to be able to degrade dNTPs and viral nucleic acids, which may both hamper HIV-1 reverse transcription. The relative contribution of these activities may differ in cycling and noncycling cells. Here, we show that inhibition of HIV-1 replication in monocyte-derived DCs (MDDCs) is associated with an increased expression of p21cip1/waf, a cell cycle regulator that is involved in the differentiation and maturation of DCs. Induction of p21 in MDDCs decreases the pool of dNTPs and increases the antiviral active isoform of SAMHD1. Although both processes are complementary in inhibiting HIV-1 replication, the antiviral activity of SAMHD1 in our primary cell model appears to be, at least partially, independent of its dNTPase activity. The reduction in the pool of dNTPs in MDDCs appears rather mostly due to a p21-mediated suppression of several enzymes involved in dNTP synthesis (i.e., RNR2, TYMS, and TK-1). These results are important to better understand the interplay between HIV-1 and DCs and may inform the design of new therapeutic approaches to decrease viral dissemination and improve immune responses against HIV-1. DCs play a key role in the induction of immune responses against HIV. However, HIV has evolved ways to exploit these cells, facilitating immune evasion and virus dissemination. We have found that the expression of p21, a cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor involved in cell cycle regulation and monocyte differentiation and maturation, potentially can contribute to the inhibition of HIV-1 replication in monocyte-derived DCs through multiple mechanisms. p21 decreased the size of the intracellular dNTP pool. In parallel, p21 prevented SAMHD1 phosphorylation and promoted SAMHD1 dNTPase-independent antiviral activity. Thus, induction of p21 resulted in conditions that allowed the effective inhibition of HIV-1 replication through complementary mechanisms. Overall, p21 appears to be a key regulator of HIV infection in myeloid cells.
由于HIV-1逆转录所需的脱氧核苷三磷酸(dNTP)供应有限,非循环细胞(如树突状细胞,DCs)的HIV-1感染受到损害。dNTP的水平在细胞周期中受到严格调控,并取决于dNTP生物合成与降解之间的平衡。SAMHD1能有效阻断DCs中的HIV-1复制,但其潜在机制仍不清楚。据报道,SAMHD1能够降解dNTP和病毒核酸,这两者都可能阻碍HIV-1逆转录。这些活性的相对贡献在循环细胞和非循环细胞中可能有所不同。在此,我们表明,单核细胞衍生的DCs(MDDCs)中HIV-1复制的抑制与p21cip1/waf表达的增加有关,p21cip1/waf是一种参与DCs分化和成熟的细胞周期调节因子。MDDCs中p21的诱导减少了dNTP库,并增加了SAMHD1的抗病毒活性异构体。尽管这两个过程在抑制HIV-1复制方面是互补的,但在我们的原代细胞模型中,SAMHD1的抗病毒活性似乎至少部分独立于其dNTP酶活性。MDDCs中dNTP库的减少似乎主要是由于p21介导的对几种参与dNTP合成的酶(即RNR2、TYMS和TK-1)的抑制。这些结果对于更好地理解HIV-1与DCs之间的相互作用很重要,并可能为设计新的治疗方法提供信息,以减少病毒传播并改善针对HIV-1的免疫反应。DCs在诱导针对HIV的免疫反应中起关键作用。然而,HIV已经进化出利用这些细胞的方式,促进免疫逃逸和病毒传播。我们发现,p21是一种参与细胞周期调控以及单核细胞分化和成熟的细胞周期蛋白依赖性激酶抑制剂,其表达可能通过多种机制有助于抑制单核细胞衍生的DCs中的HIV-1复制。p21减小了细胞内dNTP库的大小。同时,p21阻止了SAMHD1的磷酸化,并促进了SAMHD1不依赖dNTP酶的抗病毒活性。因此,p21的诱导产生了能够通过互补机制有效抑制HIV-1复制的条件。总体而言,p21似乎是髓系细胞中HIV感染的关键调节因子。