| Literature DB >> 29740045 |
Sukrutha Chettimada1, David R Lorenz1, Vikas Misra1, Simon T Dillon2,3, R Keith Reeves4, Cordelia Manickam4, Susan Morgello5, Gregory D Kirk6, Shruti H Mehta6, Dana Gabuzda7,8.
Abstract
Exosomes are nanovesicles released from most cell types including immune cells. Prior studies suggest exosomes play a role in HIV pathogenesis, but little is known about exosome cargo in relation to immune responses and oxidative stress. Here, we characterize plasma exosomes in HIV patients and their relationship to immunological and oxidative stress markers. Plasma exosome fractions were isolated from HIV-positive subjects on ART with suppressed viral load and HIV-negative controls. Exosomes were characterized by electron microscopy, nanoparticle tracking, immunoblotting, and LC-MS/MS proteomics. Plasma exosomes were increased in HIV-positive subjects compared to controls, and correlated with increased oxidative stress markers (cystine, oxidized cys-gly) and decreased PUFA (DHA, EPA, DPA). Untargeted proteomics detected markers of exosomes (CD9, CD63, CD81), immune activation (CD14, CRP, HLA-A, HLA-B), oxidative stress (CAT, PRDX1, PRDX2, TXN), and Notch4 in plasma exosomes. Exosomal Notch4 was increased in HIV-positive subjects versus controls and correlated with immune activation markers. Treatment of THP-1 monocytic cells with patient-derived exosomes induced expression of genes related to interferon responses and immune activation. These results suggest that exosomes in ART-treated HIV patients carry proteins related to immune activation and oxidative stress, have immunomodulatory effects on myeloid cells, and may have pro-inflammatory and redox effects during pathogenesis.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29740045 PMCID: PMC5940833 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-25515-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Demographic and clinical characteristics of the study cohort.
| Characteristic | HIV-negative | HIV-positive | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Years of infectionα | 0 | 14 (9.5–21.0) | |
| ART use duration (months)α | 0 | 29.1 (11.7–75.1) | |
| Age (years)α | 53.5 (48.2–56.7) | 48.1 (43.4–51.0) | |
| Gender (% male) | 64.7 | 69.7 | |
| Race (%) | White | 35 | 39.5 |
| Non-white | 65 | 60.5 | |
| CD4 count (cells/µl)α | — | 342 (195–461.5) | |
| Nadir CD4 (cells/µl)α | — | 83.5 (28.7–288.5) | |
| CD8 count (cells/µl)α | — | 836.5 (719–1357) | |
| CD4/CD8 ratioα | — | 0.25 (0.12–0.46) | |
| Plasma viral load (HIV RNA copies/ml)α | — | 404 (40–926.5) | |
| Viral load <400 HIV RNA copies/mlγ (%) | — | 53.5 | |
| HCV seropositive (%) | — | 42 | |
| Cocaine use (%)β | — | 49 | |
| Alcohol use (%)β | — | 40 | |
| Smoking (%) | 79 | 70 | |
αMedian (Interquartile range).
βBased on patient report.
γViral load below limit of detection.
ART = Antiretroviral therapy, HCV = hepatitis C virus, –Not available.
Figure 1Characterization of exosome fractions isolated from plasma. Morphological characterization of plasma exosome fractions by transmission electron microscopy (a) and vesicle size distribution measured by nanoparticle tracking analysis (NTA) (b) from one representative HIV-negative subject. (c) Detection of exosome markers CD9, CD81, CD63, and HSP70 in plasma exosome fractions by immunoblotting (25 μg protein/lane) in control (Ctrl) (no exosome fraction) and plasma exosome fraction (Exo).
Figure 2Plasma exosomes and exosome markers CD9, CD63, and HSP70 are elevated in viremic HIV-positive subjects on ART compared to controls. Exosome fractions were isolated from plasma (0.4 ml) of HIV-positive subjects (aviremic and viremic with viral load <400 and 400–2500 HIV RNA copies/ml, respectively) and HIV-negative controls. Beeswarm plots show EV concentration (a) and median size (b) measured by NTA in aviremic (n = 23) and viremic (n = 20) HIV-positive versus HIV-negative subjects (n = 34). Horizontal bars represent means and error bars represent SD. (c) Proteins (25 μg protein per lane) were separated by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotted with exosome marker antibodies against CD9, CD63, and HSP70. Representative blots from 4 HIV-negative and 4 HIV-positive samples are shown. Bands in each lane were normalized to corresponding EV numbers (full length blots for all samples are shown in Supplementary Figure S3). (d) Box plots in upper panel show exosome marker protein levels in HIV-positive (n = 37) versus HIV-negative subjects (n = 27). Box plots in lower panel show exosome marker protein levels in aviremic (n = 21) and viremic (n = 16) HIV-positive versus HIV-negative subjects (n = 27). Medians are represented by horizontal bars, boxes span the interquartile range (IQR), and whiskers extend to extreme data points within 1.5 times IQR. Outliers are plotted outside 1.5 times the IQR. p-values were calculated by Mann-Whitney U test.
Figure 3Exosome markers correlate positively with oxidative stress-related metabolites and negatively with levels of n-3 and n-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids. (a) Heatmap shows unsupervised hierarchical clustering of metabolites (n = 16) associated with oxidative stress, tryptophan catabolism, and polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) metabolism that distinguish HIV-positive from HIV-negative control subjects (FC > 1.3, p < 0.05, FDR < 0.10). (b) Metabolites associated with oxidative stress are increased, and the indicated PUFA are decreased in aviremic and viremic HIV-positive subjects versus controls (*p < 0.01, **p < 0.001). Medians represented by horizontal bars, boxes span the IQR, and whiskers extend to extreme data points within 1.5 times IQR. Outliers are plotted outside 1.5 times the IQR. P-values calculated by Welch’s t-test (p < 0.05; n = 26 HIV-negative, n = 21 HIV-positive aviremic, n = 16 HIV-positive viremic subjects). (c) Pearson correlation matrix r-values show positive correlation of exosome marker proteins (CD9 and CD63) with metabolites associated with oxidative stress, and negative correlation with n-3 and n-6 PUFA (p < 0.05). (d) Correlation scatter plots are shown with correlation coefficients and p-values above each plot. n = 36 HIV-positive, 26 HIV-negative. EPA, eicosapentaenoate (20:5n3); DHA, docosahexaenoate (22:6n3); n3 DPA, docosapentaenoate (22:5n3); n6 DPA, docosapentaenoate (22:5n6); K:T ratio, kynurenine: tryptophan ratio. Scatter plots showing Pearson correlation plots for additional exosome markers and metabolites are in Supplementary Figure S4.
Figure 4Notch4 protein is detected in plasma exosome fractions from HIV-positive subjects on ART and correlates with immune activation markers. Plasma exosome fraction (25 μg protein per lane, Ctrl = PBS blank) immunoblotted with Notch4 and exosome marker antibodies (top left). Blots are cropped and full-length blots are included in Supplementary Figure S6. Notch4 protein measured by ELISA in exosome fractions from aviremic and viremic HIV-positive versus HIV-negative subjects (top middle). Horizontal bars represent mean, error bars represent SD. P-values calculated by Mann-Whitney U test. Plasma K:T ratio is increased in aviremic and viremic HIV-positive subjects versus controls (top right). Medians in boxplots are represented by horizontal bars, boxes span the interquartile range (IQR), and whiskers extend to extreme data points within 1.5 times IQR. Outliers are plotted outside 1.5 times IQR. P-values calculated by Welch’s t-test (n = 21 HIV-negative, n = 18 aviremic, and n = 13 viremic HIV-positive subjects). Notch4 levels in HIV-positive plasma exosome fractions correlate negatively with increasing CD4/CD8 ratio and positively with K:T ratio and exosome-HLA-DRA levels in Pearson correlations (bottom panels, p < 0.05; n = 25–27).
Biological classification based on gene ontology annotation of proteins identified by mass spectrometry analysis of immunoaffinity-purified plasma exosomes.
| Biological classification | HIV-negative (n = 3) | HIV-positive (n = 4) |
|---|---|---|
| immune activation/inflammation | ADAM33, | |
| transmembrane signaling | CD4, EFNA4, LRP8, | |
| extracellular vesicles/exosomes | ||
| stress response | CAT, CDH1 | |
| oxidative stress | CAT, | |
| fatty acid/lipid metabolism | ACOX3 | |
| platelets |
PANTHER and Biobase TRANSFAC tools were used for gene ontology (GO) mapping of proteins identified by mass spectrometry analysis of IAP-purified plasma exosomes from 3 HIV-negative and 4 HIV-positive subjects in the merged datasets shown in Supplemental Tables 3 and 4. GO groups were assigned to the indicated biological functions. Individual proteins may be annotated to more than one category. Proteins identified by 2 or more unique peptides are shown in bold.
Figure 5Notch4 is expressed in human dendritic cells. (a) Notch4 gene expression profiles from Affymetrix microarray profiling of human and mouse immune cell lineages from different individual human donors (left) or different pools of C57BL/6 (B6) mice (right) from the ImmGen Consortium Database (www.immgen.org). Bar plots (top panel) show absolute NOTCH4 mRNA expression in individual cell lineages in the indicated cell types. Heatmaps show mean-centered gene expression values (red bars denote enrichment above background). NOTCH4 mRNA is expressed in dendritic cells in both human and mouse, whereas expression in NK cells is detected only in humans. (b) Representative density plots from flow cytometric analysis show gating strategy and expression of Notch4 in plasmacytoid and myeloid dendritic cell subpopulations in PBMCs (one representative donor from a total of n = 3 healthy donors). HSC, Hematopoietic stem cells; GN, Neutrophils; MO, Monocytes; DC, Dendritic cells; B, B lymphocytes; NK, Natural killer cells; T, T lymphocytes.
Figure 6Exosomes released from cultured MDDCs carry Notch4 protein. MDDCs (from n = 3 healthy donors) cultured for 5 days with exosome-depleted FBS were treated with LPS (100 ng/ml) for additional 48 hrs to induce maturation (top left panel). Exosomes were isolated from culture supernatants of mature MDDC; EV concentration and size distribution was measured before and after (48 hrs) LPS treatment, by nanoparticle tracking analysis (bottom panel). Protein extracted from mature MDDC whole cell lysates and exosomes (30 μg/lane) was immunoblotted for exosome markers, Notch4, and GAPDH (top right). Lanes 1–3 = whole cell lysates, lane 4 = PBS blank, lane 5–7 = mature MDDC derived exosomes. Blots are cropped and full-length blots are included in Supplementary Figure S7.
Figure 7Plasma exosomes from HIV-positive subjects induce gene expression changes indicative of immunomodulatory effects and immune activation in THP-1 monocytic cells. THP-1 cells were treated with 20 μg PKH26-labeled plasma exosomes for 72 hrs (left panel). THP-1 cells were treated with immunoaffinity purified-plasma exosomes (20 μg) from 4 HIV-positive and 4 HIV-negative subjects for 72 hrs (lanes 3 to 10) or with IFN-γ (100 IU/ml) or LPS (0.5 μg/ml) for 24 hrs (lanes 11 and 12). Gene expression was measured using the Nanostring nCounter PanCancer Immune Profiling Panel. Heatmap shows unsupervised hierarchical clustering of expression changes in 49 genes associated with interferon response, cytokines/chemokines, immune activation, innate immune response, and inflammation following treatment with exosomes relative to controls (lanes 1 and 2). Treatment of THP-1 cells with HIV-positive and HIV-negative plasma exosomes induced gene expression changes partially overlapping those induced by IFN-γ and LPS. Representative of 2 independent experiments.