Intracellular HIV-1 Tat regulator induces epigenetic changes in the DNA methylation landscape

被引:0
|
作者
Rodriguez-Agustin, Andrea [1 ,2 ]
Ayala-Suarez, Ruben [1 ]
Diez-Fuertes, Francisco [3 ,4 ]
Maleno, Maria Jose [1 ]
de Villasante, Izar [5 ]
Merkel, Angelika [5 ]
Coiras, Mayte [4 ,6 ]
Casanova, Victor [1 ,2 ]
Alcami, Jose [1 ,2 ,3 ,4 ]
Climent, Nuria [1 ,2 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Inst Invest Biomed August Pi i Sunyer, Fdn Recerca Clin Barcelona, AIDS & HIV Infect Grp, Barcelona, Spain
[2] Univ Barcelona UB, Barcelona, Spain
[3] Inst Salud Carlos III ISCIII, Ctr Nacl Microbiol, AIDS Immunopathol Unit, Madrid, Spain
[4] Inst Salud Carlos III ISCIII, Ctr Invest Biomed Red Enfermedades Infecciosas CIB, Madrid, Spain
[5] Josep Carreras Leukaemia Res Inst IJC, Bioinformat Unit, Badalona, Spain
[6] Inst Salud Carlos III ISCIII, Ctr Nacl Microbiol, Immunopathol & Viral Reservoir Unit, Madrid, Spain
来源
FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY | 2025年 / 16卷
关键词
HIV infection; Tat; epigenetics; DNA methylation; inflammation; 2ND CODING EXON; GENE-EXPRESSION; PROTEIN; TRANSCRIPTION; ACTIVATION; BINDING; TARGET;
D O I
10.3389/fimmu.2025.1532692
中图分类号
R392 [医学免疫学]; Q939.91 [免疫学];
学科分类号
100102 ;
摘要
Introduction The HIV regulatory protein Tat enhances viral transcription and also modifies host gene expression, affecting cell functions like cell cycle and apoptosis. Residual expression of Tat protein is detected in blood and other tissues even under antiretroviral treatment. Cohort studies have indicated that, despite virologic suppression, people with HIV (PWH) are at increased risk of comorbidities linked to chronic inflammation, accelerated immune ageing, and cellular senescence, sometimes associated with abnormal genomic methylation patterns. We analysed whether Tat influences DNA methylation and subsequently impacts the transcriptional signature, contributing to inflammation and accelerated ageing.Methods We transfected Jurkat cells with full-length Tat (Tat101), Tat's first exon (Tat72), or an empty vector (TetOFF). We assessed DNA methylation modifications via the Infinium MethylationEPIC array, and we evaluated transcriptomic alterations through RNA-Seq. Methylation levels in gene promoters or body regions were correlated to their expression data, and subsequently, we performed an overrepresentation analysis to identify the biological terms containing differentially methylated and expressed genes.Results Tat101 expression caused significant hyper- and hypomethylation changes at individual CpG sites, resulting in slightly global DNA hypermethylation. Methylation changes at gene promoters and bodies resulted in altered gene expression, specifically regulating gene transcription in 5.1% of differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in Tat101- expressing cells. In contrast, Tat72 had a minimal impact on this epigenetic process. The observed differentially methylated and expressed genes were involved in inflammatory responses, lipid antigen presentation, and apoptosis.Discussion Tat expression in HIV infection may constitute a key epigenetic modelling actor that contributes to HIV pathogenesis and chronic inflammation. Clinical interventions targeting Tat blockade may reduce chronic inflammation and cellular senescence related to HIV infection comorbidities.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Resveratrol Promotes HIV-1 Tat Accumulation via AKT/FOXO1 Signal-ing Axis and Potentiates Vorinostat to Antagonize HIV-1 Latency
    Feng, Zeming
    Yang, Zhengrong
    Gao, Xiang
    Xue, Yuhua
    Wang, Xiaohui
    CURRENT HIV RESEARCH, 2021, 19 (03) : 238 - 247
  • [32] Epigenetic regulation of HIV-1 transcription
    Tripathy, Manoj Kumar
    Abbas, Wasim
    Herbein, Georges
    EPIGENOMICS, 2011, 3 (04) : 487 - 502
  • [33] HIV-1 Tat protein induces DNA damage in human peripheral blood B-lymphocytes via mitochondrial ROS production
    El-Amine, Rawan
    Germini, Diego
    Zalcharova, Vlada V.
    Tsfasman, Tatyana
    Sheval, Eugene V.
    Louzada, Ruy A. N.
    Dupuy, Corinne
    Bilhou-Nabera, Chrystele
    Hamade, Aline
    Najjar, Fadia
    Oksenhendler, Eric
    Lipinski, Marc
    Chernyak, Boris V.
    Vassetzky, Yegor S.
    REDOX BIOLOGY, 2018, 15 : 97 - 108
  • [34] DNA methylation as an epigenetic regulator of gallbladder cancer: An overview
    Muhammad, Jibran Sualeh
    Khan, Muhammad Rizwan
    Ghias, Kulsoom
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SURGERY, 2018, 53 : 178 - 183
  • [35] Dysregulation of mitochondrial bioenergetics and quality control by HIV-1 Tat in cardiomyocytes
    Tahrir, Farzaneh G.
    Shanmughapriya, Santhanam
    Ahooyi, Taha Mohseni
    Knezevic, Tijana
    Gupta, Manish K.
    Kontos, Christopher D.
    McClung, Joseph M.
    Madesh, Muniswamy
    Gordon, Jennifer
    Feldman, Arthur M.
    Cheung, Joseph Y.
    Khalili, Kamel
    JOURNAL OF CELLULAR PHYSIOLOGY, 2018, 233 (02) : 748 - 758
  • [36] Epigenetic changes in neurology: DNA methylation in multiple sclerosis
    Iridoy Zulet, M.
    Pulido Fontes, L.
    Ayuso Blanco, T.
    Lacruz Bescos, F.
    Mendioroz Iriarte, M.
    NEUROLOGIA, 2017, 32 (07): : 463 - 468
  • [37] Identification of HIV-1 Tat-Associated Proteins Contributing to HIV-1 Transcription and Latency
    Jean, Maxime Junior
    Power, Derek
    Kong, Weili
    Huang, Huachao
    Santoso, Netty
    Zhu, Jian
    VIRUSES-BASEL, 2017, 9 (04):
  • [38] Cell-type-specific proteome and interactome: using HIV-1 Tat as a test case
    Van Duyne, Rachel
    Kehn-Hall, Kylene
    Carpio, Lawrence
    Kashanchi, Fatah
    EXPERT REVIEW OF PROTEOMICS, 2009, 6 (05) : 515 - 526
  • [39] Targeting Tat-TAR RNA Interaction for HIV-1 Inhibition
    Alanazi, Awadh
    Ivanov, Andrey
    Kumari, Namita
    Lin, Xionghao
    Wang, Songping
    Kovalskyy, Dmytro
    Nekhai, Sergei
    VIRUSES-BASEL, 2021, 13 (10):
  • [40] Intersubtype Genetic Variation of HIV-1 Tat Exon 1
    Roy, Chandra Nath
    Khandaker, Irona
    Oshitani, Hitoshi
    AIDS RESEARCH AND HUMAN RETROVIRUSES, 2015, 31 (06) : 641 - 648