Cell Reports (Oct 2017)

Host MicroRNAs-221 and -222 Inhibit HIV-1 Entry in Macrophages by Targeting the CD4 Viral Receptor

  • Robert Lodge,
  • Jérémy A. Ferreira Barbosa,
  • Félix Lombard-Vadnais,
  • Julian C. Gilmore,
  • Alexandre Deshiere,
  • Annie Gosselin,
  • Tomas Raul Wiche Salinas,
  • Mariana G. Bego,
  • Christopher Power,
  • Jean-Pierre Routy,
  • Petronela Ancuta,
  • Michel J. Tremblay,
  • Éric A. Cohen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2017.09.030
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1
pp. 141 – 153

Abstract

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Macrophages are heterogeneous immune cells with distinct origins, phenotypes, functions, and tissue localization. Their susceptibility to HIV-1 is subject to variations from permissiveness to resistance, owing in part to regulatory microRNAs. Here, we used RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) to examine the expression of >400 microRNAs in productively infected and bystander cells of HIV-1-exposed macrophage cultures. Two microRNAs upregulated in bystander macrophages, miR-221 and miR-222, were identified as negative regulators of CD4 expression and CD4-mediated HIV-1 entry. Both microRNAs were enhanced by tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), an inhibitor of CD4 expression. MiR-221/miR-222 inhibitors recovered HIV-1 entry in TNF-α-treated macrophages by enhancing CD4 expression and increased HIV-1 replication and spread in macrophages by countering TNF-α-enhanced miR-221/miR-222 expression in bystander cells. In line with these findings, HIV-1-resistant intestinal myeloid cells express higher levels of miR-221 than peripheral blood monocytes. Thus, miR-221/miR-222 act as effectors of the antiviral host response activated during macrophage infection that restrict HIV-1 entry.

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