| Literature DB >> 26307764 |
German G Gornalusse1, Srinivas Mummidi2, Alvaro A Gaitan2, Fabio Jimenez2, Veron Ramsuran3, Anabela Picton4, Kristen Rogers1, Muthu Saravanan Manoharan2, Nymisha Avadhanam2, Krishna K Murthy5, Hernan Martinez2, Angela Molano Murillo2, Zoya A Chykarenko6, Richard Hutt7, Demetre Daskalakis7, Ludmila Shostakovich-Koretskaya6, Salim Abdool Karim8, Jeffrey N Martin9, Steven G Deeks9, Frederick Hecht9, Elizabeth Sinclair9, Robert A Clark2, Jason Okulicz10, Fred T Valentine7, Neil Martinson11, Caroline Tanya Tiemessen12, Thumbi Ndung'u3, Peter W Hunt9, Weijing He2, Sunil K Ahuja13.
Abstract
T-cell expression levels of CC chemokine receptor 5 (CCR5) are a critical determinant of HIV/AIDS susceptibility, and manifest wide variations (i) between T-cell subsets and among individuals and (ii) in T-cell activation-induced increases in expression levels. We demonstrate that a unifying mechanism for this variation is differences in constitutive and T-cell activation-induced DNA methylation status of CCR5 cis-regulatory regions (cis-regions). Commencing at an evolutionarily conserved CpG (CpG -41), CCR5 cis-regions manifest lower vs. higher methylation in T cells with higher vs. lower CCR5 levels (memory vs. naïve T cells) and in memory T cells with higher vs. lower CCR5 levels. HIV-related and in vitro induced T-cell activation is associated with demethylation of these cis-regions. CCR5 haplotypes associated with increased vs. decreased gene/surface expression levels and HIV/AIDS susceptibility magnify vs. dampen T-cell activation-associated demethylation. Methylation status of CCR5 intron 2 explains a larger proportion of the variation in CCR5 levels than genotype or T-cell activation. The ancestral, protective CCR5-HHA haplotype bears a polymorphism at CpG -41 that is (i) specific to southern Africa, (ii) abrogates binding of the transcription factor CREB1 to this cis-region, and (iii) exhibits a trend for overrepresentation in persons with reduced susceptibility to HIV and disease progression. Genotypes lacking the CCR5-Δ32 mutation but with hypermethylated cis-regions have CCR5 levels similar to genotypes heterozygous for CCR5-Δ32. In HIV-infected individuals, CCR5 cis-regions remain demethylated, despite restoration of CD4+ counts (≥800 cells per mm(3)) with antiretroviral therapy. Thus, methylation content of CCR5 cis-regions is a central epigenetic determinant of T-cell CCR5 levels, and possibly HIV-related outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: CCR5; HIV; T-cell activation; methylation; polymorphism
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26307764 PMCID: PMC4553789 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1423228112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205