ILANIT 2020

Functional proteomic atlas of HIV-infection in primary human CD4+ T cells

Adi Naamati James C Williamson Edward Jd Greenwood Sara Marelli Paul J Lehner Nicholas J Matheson
Department of Medicine, University of Cambridge School of Clinical Medicine, UK

Viruses manipulate host cells to enhance their replication, and the identification of host factors targeted by viruses has led to key insights in both viral pathogenesis and cellular physiology. We previously described global changes in cellular protein levels during HIV infection using transformed CEM-T4 T cells as a model. In this study, we develop an HIV reporter virus (HIV-AFMACS) displaying a streptavidin-binding affinity tag at the surface of infected cells, allowing facile one-step selection with streptavidin-conjugated magnetic beads. We use this system to obtain pure populations of HIV-infected primary human CD4+ T cells for detailed proteomic analysis, including quantitation of >9,000 proteins across 4 different donors, and temporal profiling during T cell activation. Remarkably, amongst 650 cellular proteins significantly perturbed during HIV infection of primary T cells (q<0.05), at least half are regulated directly or indirectly by the viral accessory proteins Vpr, Vif, Nef and Vpu. The remainder have not been previously characterised, but include novel Vif-dependent targets FMR1 and DPH7, and 192 targets not identified and/or regulated in T cell lines, such as AIRD5A and PTPN22. We therefore provide a high-coverage functional proteomic atlas of HIV infection, and a mechanistic account of HIV-dependent changes in its natural target cell.









Powered by Eventact EMS