IL-27 inhibits HIV-1 infection in human macrophages by down-regulating host factor SPTBN1 during monocyte to macrophage differentiation

Authors:
Dai L, Lidie KB, Chen Q, Adelsberger JW, Zheng X, Huang D, Yang J, Lempicki RA, Rehman T, Dewar RL, Wang Y, Hornung RL, Canizales KA, Lockett SJ, Lane HC, Imamichi T
In:
Source: J Exp Med
Publication Date: (2013)
Issue: 210(3): 517-34
Research Area:
Immunotherapy / Hematology
Basic Research
Platform:
4D-Nucleofector® 96-well Systems
Experiment
DNA transfection of macrophages was performed using a P3 Primary Cell kit (V4SP-3096) in 96-well Shuttle Nucleofector system (Lonza). To transfect macrophages, 105/well cells were mixed with 0.4 µg plasmid DNA in 20 µl P3 primary cell solution, and program 96-DP-148 was applied for nucleofection. SPTBN1 expression was assessed by Western blotting 48 h after transfection.
Abstract
The susceptibility of macrophages to HIV-1 infection is modulated during monocyte differentiation. IL-27 is an anti-HIV cytokine that also modulates monocyte activation. In this study, we present new evidence that IL-27 promotes monocyte differentiation into macrophages that are nonpermissive for HIV-1 infection. Although IL-27 treatment does not affect expression of macrophage differentiation markers or macrophage biological functions, it confers HIV resistance by down-regulating spectrin ß nonerythrocyte 1 (SPTBN1), a required host factor for HIV-1 infection. IL-27 down-regulates SPTBN1 through a TAK-1-mediated MAPK signaling pathway. Knockdown of SPTBN1 strongly inhibits HIV-1 infection of macrophages; conversely, overexpression of SPTBN1 markedly increases HIV susceptibility of IL-27-treated macrophages. Moreover, we demonstrate that SPTBN1 associates with HIV-1 gag proteins. Collectively, our results underscore the ability of IL-27 to protect macrophages from HIV-1 infection by down-regulating SPTBN1, thus indicating that SPTBN1 is an important host target to reduce HIV-1 replication in one major element of the viral reservoir.