Publikation

HIV-1-infected dendritic cells show 2 phases of gene expression changes, with lysosomal enzyme activity decreased during the second phase

Wissenschaftlicher Artikel/Review - 02.07.2009

Bereiche
PubMed
DOI

Zitation
Harman A, Driessen C, Slobedman B, Stern J, Nasr N, Mercier S, Tang O, Turville S, Byth K, Bye C, Kraus M, Cunningham A. HIV-1-infected dendritic cells show 2 phases of gene expression changes, with lysosomal enzyme activity decreased during the second phase. Blood 2009; 114:85-94.
Art
Wissenschaftlicher Artikel/Review (Englisch)
Zeitschrift
Blood 2009; 114
Veröffentlichungsdatum
02.07.2009
eISSN (Online)
1528-0020
Seiten
85-94
Kurzbeschreibung/Zielsetzung

Dendritic cells (DCs) play a key role in the pathogenesis of HIV infection. HIV interacts with these cells through 2 pathways in 2 temporal phases, initially via endocytosis and then via de novo replication. Here the transcriptional response of human DCs to HIV-1 was studied in these phases and at different stages of the virus replication cycle using purified HIV-1 envelope proteins, and inactivated and viable HIV-1. No differential gene expression was detected in response to envelope. However, more than 100 genes were differentially expressed in response to entry of viable and inactivated HIV-1 in the first phase. A completely different set of genes was differentially expressed in the second phase, predominantly in response to viable HIV-1, including up-regulation of immune regulation genes, whereas genes encoding lysosomal enzymes were down-regulated. Cathepsins B, C, S, and Z RNA and protein decreased, whereas cathepsin L was increased, probably reflecting a concomitant decrease in cystatin C. The net effect was markedly diminished cathepsin activity likely to result in enhanced HIV-1 survival and transfer to contacting T lymphocytes but decreased HIV-1 antigen processing and presentation to these T cells.