Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine IV, Hospital of the LMU Munich, Munich, Germany.
German Center for Infection Research (DZIF), Partner Site Munich, Germany.
PLoS One. 2020 Sep 18;15(9):e0239399. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0239399. eCollection 2020.
HIV-1 infection exhibits a significant sex bias. This study aimed at identifying and examining lymphocyte associated sex differences in HIV-1 pathogenesis using a data-driven approach. To select targets for investigating sex differences in lymphocytes, data of microarray experiments and literature mining were integrated. Data from three large-scale microarray experiments were obtained from NCBI/GEO and screened for sex differences in gene expression. Literature mining was employed to identify sex biased genes in the microarray data, which were relevant to HIV-1 pathogenesis and lymphocyte biology. Sex differences in gene expression of selected genes were investigated by RT-qPCR and flowcytometry in healthy individuals and persons living with HIV-1. A significant and consistent sex bias was identified in 31 genes, the majority of which were related to immunity and expressed at higher levels in women. Using literature mining, three genes (DPP4, FCGR1A and SOCS3) were selected for analysis by qPCR because of their relevance to HIV, as well as, B and T cell biology. DPP4 exhibited the most significant sex bias in mRNA expression (p = 0.00029). Therefore, its expression was further analyzed on B and T cells using flowcytometry. In HIV-1 infected controllers and healthy individuals, frequencies of CD4+DPP4+ T cells were higher in women compared to men (p = 0.037 and p = 0.027). In women, CD4 T cell counts correlated with a predominant decreased in DPP4+CD4+ T cells (p = 0.0032). Sex differences in DPP4 expression abrogated in progressive HIV-1 infection. In conclusion, we found sex differences in the pathobiology of T cells in HIV-1 infection using a data-driven approach. Our results indicate that DPP4 expression on CD4+ T cells might contribute to the immunological sex differences observed in chronic HIV‑1 infection.
HIV-1 感染表现出显著的性别偏向。本研究旨在通过数据驱动的方法确定并研究 HIV-1 发病机制中与淋巴细胞相关的性别差异。为了选择目标来研究淋巴细胞中的性别差异,整合了微阵列实验数据和文献挖掘。从 NCBI/GEO 获得了三个大规模微阵列实验的数据,并筛选基因表达的性别差异。文献挖掘用于识别微阵列数据中与 HIV-1 发病机制和淋巴细胞生物学相关的性别偏向基因。通过 RT-qPCR 和流式细胞术在健康个体和 HIV-1 感染者中研究选定基因的性别差异表达。在 31 个基因中发现了显著且一致的性别偏差,其中大多数与免疫相关,女性表达水平更高。使用文献挖掘,由于与 HIV 以及 B 和 T 细胞生物学相关,选择了三个基因(DPP4、FCGR1A 和 SOCS3)进行 qPCR 分析。DPP4 在 mRNA 表达中表现出最显著的性别偏差(p = 0.00029)。因此,使用流式细胞术进一步分析了其在 B 和 T 细胞上的表达。在 HIV-1 感染者和健康个体中,女性 CD4+DPP4+T 细胞的频率高于男性(p = 0.037 和 p = 0.027)。在女性中,CD4 T 细胞计数与 DPP4+CD4+T 细胞的显著减少相关(p = 0.0032)。在进展性 HIV-1 感染中,DPP4 表达的性别差异消失。总之,我们使用数据驱动的方法在 HIV-1 感染的 T 细胞发病机制中发现了性别差异。我们的结果表明,CD4+T 细胞上的 DPP4 表达可能有助于解释慢性 HIV-1 感染中观察到的免疫性别差异。