![]() | ||
|
Nanotechnology Oncology Genetics Medical Education Publications Technique Pilots Bone-forming Cells to the Bone Marrow More Faculty Become AAAS Fellows Professorship in Ophthalmology at Mass. Eye and Ear and HMS Centers on Clinical Teaching RFA Announced for Med Ed Fellowships HSDM Wins First Gies Vision Award Dean’s Community Service Awards Call for Nominations
|
GENETICS Broad Reliance on Host Could Prove Deadly for HIVGenomic Screen Nets Hundreds of Human Proteins Exploited by the Virus In some ways, HIV resembles a minimalist painter, using a few basic components
to achieve dramatic effects. The virus contains just nine genes encoding
15 proteins, which wreak havoc on the human immune system. But this bare
bones approach could have a fatal flaw. Lacking robust machinery, HIV has
to hijack human proteins to propagate, and these might represent powerful
therapeutic targets.
Through an RNA interference screen, HMS researchers (clockwise from top left) Derek Dykxhoorn, Ramnik Xavier, Nan Yan, Yair Benita, Stephen Elledge, Judy Lieberman, and Abraham Brass identified 273 human proteins required for HIV propagation. “That’s why we decided to take a different approach centered on the human proteins exploited by the virus,” said Elledge, who is also an investigator with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and a member of the HMS–Partners HealthCare Center for Genetics and Genomics. “These host factors are not mutating rapidly, so they offer stable therapeutic targets.” The new screen quadrupled the list of known host factors, implicating proteins
involved with a surprising array of cellular functions. Elledge hopes that
researchers will be able to cripple HIV by tinkering with some of these proteins. To create the list, postdoctoral researcher and first author Abraham Brass—working with Derek Dykxhoorn and Nan Yan from the lab of HMS professor of pediatrics Judy Lieberman—began with a massive library of short interfering RNAs (siRNAs) made available by the ICCB-Longwood screening facility. Brass knocked down more than 21,000 genes—one at a time—in human cervical cancer cells that thrive in culture. He unleashed HIV-1 on these cells, which had already been modified to include receptors for the virus. If HIV replication was inhibited in a given well, it would suggest the missing protein was involved. “Given the method, we missed some of the host factors,” Brass explained. Many of the siRNAs, for example, target proteins the cell needs to survive. These siRNAs killed the cells before Brass could apply HIV, so he could not test them. “This is just a first crack at a comprehensive list, but the majority of the host factors we found are highly likely to play a role in HIV propagation,” he said. By designing a two-part screen, Brass was able to determine approximately when the host factors act on the virus. After adding HIV to the wells, he waited 48 hours before staining for p24, produced from the HIV gag gene. This allowed him to identify proteins required for viral entry through Gag translation.
To capture late-acting factors, he collected supernatant from wells where HIV appeared to be thriving, mixed it with fresh cells, waited 24 hours, and then examined the expression of tat, another HIV gene. If tat expression was low, Brass suspected the supernatant did not contain potent viral particles, suggesting he had interfered with a host factor involved in viral assembly and budding. Of the 273 host factors he identified, just 36 had been previously implicated in the HIV life cycle. The Viral Takeover “We didn’t expect those pathways to pop up,” recalled Lieberman, who is also an investigator at the Immune Disease Institute and director of the HMS Division of AIDS. Brass was particularly intrigued by retrograde trafficking from the Golgi, so he took a closer look at Rab6, which helps the organelle adorn lipids and proteins with carbohydrates by shuttling enzymes from place to place. Perhaps HIV relies on the accoutrements of cell membrane constituents more than previously realized, since tests revealed that silencing Rab6 interfered with HIV entry. Brass also examined two proteins involved after fusion. He suspects the first protein—TNPO3—might shuttle the HIV pre-integration complex from the cytoplasm into the nucleus through a pore. “The expanded list is a hypothesis-generation machine,” explained Elledge. “Like Abe [Brass], other scientists can look at the list, predict why HIV needs a particular protein, and then test their hypothesis.” Labs can use the list to probe the basic biology of the virus. The team is confident that their findings extend from the experimental cancer cells to the immune cells where HIV thrives, though this remains to be proven. Immune cells contain high concentrations of many of the host factors identified, suggesting the screen is valid.
What a virus needs. HIV appears to depend on 273 host cell factors that play a role in an array of cellular pathways from autophagy to retrograde trafficking out of the Golgi. This subcellular localization chart suggests the functional diversity. “The factors identified by the screen also represent drug targets because they’re not essential for cell viability,” added Lieberman. And the very siRNAs Brass used to disrupt genes in vitro might hold promise as therapeutic agents in vivo. In 2006, Lieberman’s lab delivered siRNAs selectively into HIV-infected white blood cells by mixing them with an antibody fragment fused to an siRNA binding peptide. She plans to extend this work to induce silencing selectively in all the immune cells HIV can infect. As some labs pursue this angle, others will undoubtedly work toward conventional drugs that target the host factors identified by the study. “We’re closing in on a systems level understanding of HIV, which opens new therapeutic avenues,” said Elledge. “We might be able to tweak various parts of the system to disrupt viral propagation without making our own cells sick.” |
|