Plitnik Timothy, Sharkey Mark E, Mahboubi Bijan, Kim Baek, Stevenson Mario
Department of Microbiology & Immunology; Miller School of Medicine, University of Miami; Miami, Florida.
Department of Medicine; Miller School of Medicine, University of Miami; Miami, Florida.
Pathog Immun. 2018;3(2):197-223. doi: 10.20411/pai.v3i2.263. Epub 2018 Dec 6.
Sterile alpha motif and histidine/aspartic acid domain-containing protein (SAMHD1) is a dNTP triphosphorylase that reduces cellular dNTP levels in non-dividing cells, such as macrophages. Since dNTPs are required for reverse transcription, HIV-2 and most SIVs encode a Vpx protein that promotes proteasomal degradation of SAMHD1. It is unclear how HIV-1, which does not appear to harbor a SAMHD1 escape mechanism, is able to infect macrophages in the face of SAMHD1 restriction.
To assess whether HIV-1 had a mechanism to negate SAMHD1 activity, we compared SAMHD1 and dNTP levels in macrophages infected by HIV-1 and SIV. We examined whether macrophages infected by HIV-1 still harbored antiviral levels of SAMHD1 by assessing their susceptibility to superinfection by -deleted SIV. Finally, to assess whether HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT) has adapted to a low dNTP environment, we evaluated SAMHD1 sensitivity of chimeric HIV-1 and SIV variants in which the RT regions were functionally exchanged.
Here, we demonstrate that HIV-1 efficiently infects macrophages without modulating SAMHD1 activity or cellular dNTP levels, and that macrophages permissive to HIV-1 infection remained refractory to superinfection by -deleted SIV. Furthermore, through the use of chimeric HIV/SIV, we demonstrate that the differential sensitivity of HIV-1 and SIV to SAMHD1 restriction is not dictated by RT.
Our study reveals fundamental differences between HIV-1 and SIV in the strategy used to evade restriction by SAMHD1 and suggests a degree of resistance of HIV-1 to the antiviral environment created by SAMHD1. Understanding how these cellular restrictions antagonize viral replication will be important for the design of novel antiviral strategies.
含无菌α基序和组氨酸/天冬氨酸结构域蛋白(SAMHD1)是一种dNTP三磷酸酶,可降低非分裂细胞(如巨噬细胞)中的细胞dNTP水平。由于逆转录需要dNTP,HIV-2和大多数猴免疫缺陷病毒(SIV)编码一种Vpx蛋白,该蛋白可促进SAMHD1的蛋白酶体降解。目前尚不清楚在没有SAMHD1逃逸机制的情况下,HIV-1如何在SAMHD1限制下感染巨噬细胞。
为评估HIV-1是否具有抵消SAMHD1活性的机制,我们比较了HIV-1和SIV感染的巨噬细胞中SAMHD1和dNTP水平。我们通过评估其对缺失Vpx的SIV再次感染的敏感性,来检查HIV-1感染的巨噬细胞是否仍具有抗病毒水平的SAMHD1。最后,为评估HIV-1逆转录酶(RT)是否已适应低dNTP环境,我们评估了RT区域功能互换的嵌合HIV-1和SIV变体对SAMHD1的敏感性。
在此,我们证明HIV-1能有效感染巨噬细胞,而无需调节SAMHD1活性或细胞dNTP水平,并且允许HIV-1感染的巨噬细胞对缺失Vpx的SIV再次感染仍具有抗性。此外,通过使用嵌合HIV/SIV,我们证明HIV-1和SIV对SAMHD1限制的不同敏感性并非由RT决定。
我们的研究揭示了HIV-1和SIV在逃避SAMHD1限制所采用策略上的根本差异,并表明HIV-1对SAMHD1产生的抗病毒环境具有一定程度的抗性。了解这些细胞限制如何拮抗病毒复制对于新型抗病毒策略的设计至关重要。