| Literature DB >> 22606989 |
Abstract
Autophagy, the major mechanism for degrading long-lived intracellular proteins and organelles, is essential for eukaryotic cell homeostasis. Autophagy also defends the cell against invasion by microorganisms and has important roles in innate and adaptive immunity. Increasingly evident is that HIV-1 replication is dependent on select components of autophagy. Fittingly, HIV-1 proteins are able to modulate autophagy to maximize virus production. At the same time, HIV-1 proteins appear to disrupt autophagy in uninfected cells, thereby contributing to CD4+ cell death and HIV-1 pathogenesis. These observations allow for new approaches for the treatment and possibly the prevention of HIV-1 infection. This review focuses on the relationship between autophagy and HIV-1 infection. Discussed is how autophagy plays dual roles in HIV-1 replication and HIV-1 disease progression.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22606989 PMCID: PMC3514335 DOI: 10.1186/1742-6405-9-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AIDS Res Ther ISSN: 1742-6405 Impact factor: 2.250
Figure 1The 3 stages of autophagy. Illustrated are distinct stages in the process of autophagy.i) Autophagy is initiated by pathways that inactivate mTOR. ii) Autophagosome synthesis involves the coupling of LC3-II to the autophagosome membrane and the formation of double membrane vesicles that sequester cytoplasmic material. iii) The final stage of autophagy, proteolysis, entails the fusion of mature autophagosomes with lysosomes and the release of breakdown products into the cytoplasm.
Major human autophagy-related genes and their functions
| | mTOR | | 1p36.2 | Negative regulator of autophagy. | [ |
| | RPTOR | | 17q25.3 | Acts to regulate mTOR. | [ |
| | ULK1 | ATG1 | 12q24.3 | Components of ULK1 protein kinase complex. | [ |
| | ATG13 | | 11p11.2 | [ | |
| | RB1CC1 | FIP200 | 8q11.23 | [ | |
| | C12orf44 | ATG101 | 2q13.13 | [ | |
| | ATG9A,B | | 2q35, 7q36 | Components of ATG9-WIPI complex and Vps34-beclin1 class III PI3-kinase complex. | [ |
| | WIPI | ATG18 | 17q24.2 | [ | |
| | PIK3C3 | VPS34 | 18q12.3 | [ | |
| | PIK3R4 | VPS15 | 3q22.1 | | |
| | BECN1 | ATG6 | 17q21 | [ | |
| | ATG14 | | 14q22.3 | [ | |
| | UVRAG | VPS38 | 11q13.5 | [ | |
| | Rubicon | KIAA0226 | 3q29 | | |
| | AMBRA1 | | 11p11 | | |
| | ATG2A, B | | 11q13, 14q32 | [ | |
| | ATG12 | | 5q22 | Autophagosome formation; Atg12 conjugation. Atg7 and Atg10 are E1- and E2-like enzymes respectively. | [ |
| | ATG5 | | 6q21 | [ | |
| | ATG16L | ATG16 | 2q37.1 | [ | |
| | ATG7 | | 3p25.3 | [ | |
| | ATG10 | | 5q14.1 | [ | |
| | MAP1LC3B | ATG8 | 16q24.2 | Autophagosome maturation; LC3/Atg8 conjugation. | [ |
| | GABARAP | ATG8 | 17p13.1 | [ | |
| | GABARAPL2 | GATE16 | 16q22.1 | | |
| | ATG7 | | 3p25.3 | [ | |
| | ATG3 | | 3q13.2 | [ | |
| | ATG4 | | Xq22.3 | [ | |
| | TFEB | | 6p21 | Transcription factor that regulates Atg and lysosomal genes. | [ |
| RAB7 | 3q21 | Mediates fusion between autophagosome and lysosome. | [ | ||
General methods for measuring autophagy*
| Direct enumeration and quantitation of autophagosomes.Visible as double-membrane vesicles. | Electron microscopy*** |
| LC3-II to LC3-I ratio. Provides a measurement of autophagic flux with the LC3B-II/LC3B-I ratio concomitantly increasing with autophagosome numbers. | WB**** |
| LC3 localization. Punctate spots visible by microscopy. Total intracellular levels may increase along with autophagosome numbers. | ICC, FC, transfection of LC3 reporter plasmid followed by fluorescent microscopy or FC |
| Quantitation of autophagy-associated gene expression levels, e.g., BECN1. | qPCR |
| Quantitation of autophagy-associated protein levels, e.g., Beclin-1. | WB, ELISA |
| Silencing of autophagy-associated genes. | RNAi |
| Manipulation of autophagic flux. | Use of rapamycin, bafilomycin A1, and 3-MA |
* Because the process is highly conserved among eukaryotes, these methods are broadly applicable to studies of autophagy in humans and animal models [27,31].
** Western blot (WB), flow cytometry (FC), immunocytochemistry (ICC), quantitative PCR (qPCR), RNA interference (RNAi).
*** “Gold standard” method for quantifying the number of autophagosomes.
**** “Gold standard” method for quantitating autophagic flux. Some commercially available anti-human LC3 antibodies are cross-species reactive, allowing for studies with non-human primate cells (e.g. Anti-MAP1LC3B2, cat.no. AB2970, Millipore, Billerica, MA).
Figure 2Example of an autophagosome in an HIV-infected cell. Shown is a transmission electron micrograph of an HIV-1SF33-infected monocyte-derived macrophage (L Ackerman and MS Killian, unpublished data). At higher magnification, the HIV-1 particles (roughly 0.1 μm in diameter) are clearly visible within the autophagosomal structure (inset). Abbreviations: nucleus, N; autophagosome, AP; rough endoplasmic reticulum, RER. Arrows point to the multiple membranes surrounding the autophagosome.
Figure 3Autophagy in HIV-1 infection. Left) HIV-1 replication requires early autophagic events for its replication [39], perhaps because the autophagosomal membrane provides a scaffold for virion assembly. Incomplete, or fully formed virions that enter the cell via endocytosis [40], could be degraded by the autophagy (xenophagy) pathway. However, HIV-1 can inhibit the late stage of autophagy to avoid the digestion of virions within autolysosomes. Right) Autophagy is a crucial component of innate and adaptive immune responses to HIV-1 infection. Autophagy is required for the TLR7-mediated signaling of interferon-alpha (IFN-α) production by plasmacytoid dendritic cells (innate immunity) in response to HIV [41]. Autophagy also contributes to proteolytic processing for the presentation of HIV-1 peptides in the context of MHC class II (adaptive immunity).
Relationships between HIV-1 proteins and autophagy
| Gag | In macrophages: Gag colocalizes with LC3, perhaps to promote virion assembly. | [ |
| Env | In bystander T cells and neuronal cells: Env induces autophagy and promotes autophagic T cell death. | [ |
| Nef | Nef interacts with IRGM to induce autophagy. Nef also acts as an "antiautophagic maturation factor" and blocks the late proteolytic stage of autophagy. | [ |
| Tat | In macrophages: Tat blocks IFN-γ-induced LC3 expression and inhibits autophagy. | [ |
| In bystander HUVEC*: Tat increases autophagy. | [ |
* Human umbilical vein endothelial cells.
Roles of autophagy in HIV-1 infection, pathogenesis, and treatment
| HIV-1replication | In HeLa cells, autophagy-associated genes are necessary for HIV-1 replication. | [ |
| In CD4+ T cells, HIV-1 inhibits autophagy as evidenced by decreased autophagosome numbers and reduced levels of Beclin 1 and LC3 II. | [ | |
| HIV-1pathogenesis | In macrophages, early nondegradative stages of autophagy promote HIV-1 replication. HIV-1 Gag interacts with LC3 to elevate these stages. The late proteolytic stages of autophagy inhibit HIV-1 replication. Nef interacts with Beclin 1 to inhibit these stages | [ |
| In bystander T cells, HIV-1 Env induces autophagy and the accumulation of Beclin1 in uninfected CD4+ T cells. This event leads to apoptosis. | [ | |
| Bystander macrophages do not undergo Env-mediated autophagy. HIV-1 inhibits autophagy in bystander macrophage/monocytic cells through an Akt-dependent pathway. | [ | |
| In dendritic cells, HIV-1 capture down-regulates autophagy and immunoamphisomes in monocyte-derived dendritic cells, impairing innate and adaptive immune responses. Plasmacytoid dendritic cells produce IFN-α in response to infectious or noninfectious HIV-1 through autophagy-dependent TLR7 signaling. This response could promote chronic immune activation. | [ | |
| Neurotoxicity. The dysregulation of autophagy is a feature of neuroAIDS. The brains of persons with HIV-1 encephalitis exhibit increased levels of autophagic proteins and autophagosomes. | [ | |
| Treatment * | Antiretroviral therapy. HIV-1 protease inhibitors induce autophagy in cancer cells. Clinical concentrations of EFV induce autophagy and, in particular, mitophagy in hepatic cells. ddI treatment restores neuronal LC3 expression in the brains of FIV-infected animals. | [ |
| Vitamin D. It has been observed that HIV-infected individuals have reduced levels of the hormonally active form of vitamin D and that this compound has autophagy-dependent anti-HIV-1 effects on macrophages. | [ |
* Abbreviations: efavirenz, EFV; feline immunodeficiency virus, FIV; didanosine, ddI.
Pharmacologic modifiers of autophagy
| | Rapamycin* | Inhibits mTOR signaling. | [ |
| | Carbamazepine | Inhibition of inositol monophosphatase. | [ |
| | Lithium | Inhibition of inositol monophosphatase. | [ |
| | Digoxin | Undetermined. | [ |
| | Vitamin E | Increases phosphorylation of mTOR substrates. | [ |
| | Verapamil | Reduces calcium flux into the cell. | [ |
| | Clonidine | Reduces cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP). | [ |
| | Trehalose | mTOR independent mechanism. | [ |
| | Tamoxifen | Increases the intracellular level of ceramide. | [ |
| | Niclosamide | Inhibits mTOR signaling. | [ |
| | Rottlerin | Inhibits mTOR signaling. | [ |
| | Amiodarone | Inhibits mTOR signaling. | [ |
| | Chloroquine | Blocks the fusion of autophagosomes with lysosomes. | [ |
| | Verteporfin | Inhibitor of autophagosome accumulation. | [ |
| | 3-Methyladenine* | Inhibitor of class III PI3K (Vps34). | [ |
| | Bafilomycin A1* | Ion Channel Inhibitor; V-ATPase inhibitor. | [ |
| | Wortmannin | PI3K inhibitor. | [ |
| | LY294002 | PI3K inhibitor. | [ |
| | Leupeptin | Inhibitor of serine and cysteine proteases. | [ |
| Asparagine | Prevents transfer of autophaged material to lysosomes. | [ | |
* Commonly used in basic research studies.