4.7 Article

HIV-1 Nef-induced cardiotoxicity through dysregulation of autophagy

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-08736-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01GM109882, R01HL086699, R01HL119306]
  2. NIH through the NIMH
  3. NIH through NINDS
  4. Texas NeuroAIDS Research Center [U24MH100930]
  5. California NeuroAIDS Tissue Network [U24MH100928]
  6. National Neurological AIDS Bank [U24MH100929]
  7. Manhattan HIV Brain Bank [U24MH100931]
  8. Data Coordinating Center [U24MH100925]
  9. [R01 NS082116]
  10. [R01 HL123093]
  11. [P30 MH092177]

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Cardiovascular disease is a leading cause of co-morbidity in HIV-1 positive patients, even those in whom plasma virus levels are well-controlled. The pathogenic mechanism of HIV-1-associated cardiomyopathy is unknown, but has been presumed to be mediated indirectly, owing to the absence of productive HIV-1 replication in cardiomyocytes. We sought to investigate the effect of the HIV-1 auxiliary protein, Nef, which is suspected of extracellular release by infected CD4+T cells on protein quality control and autophagy in cardiomyocytes. After detection of Nef in the serum of HIV-1 positive patients and the accumulation of this protein in human and primate heart tissue from HIV-1/SIV-infected cells we employed cell and molecular biology approaches to investigate the effect of Nef on cardiomyocyte-homeostasis by concentrating on protein quality control (PQC) pathway and autophagy. We found that HIV-1 Nef-mediated inhibition of autophagy flux leads to cytotoxicity and death of cardiomyocytes. Nef compromises autophagy at the maturation stage of autophagosomes by interacting with Beclin 1/Rab7 and dysregulating TFEB localization and cellular lysosome content. These effects were reversed by rapamycin treatment. Our results indicate that HIV-1 Nef-mediated inhibition of cellular PQC is one possible mechanism involved in the development of HIV-associated cardiomyopathy.

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