HIV-1 down-modulates γ signaling chain of FcγR in human macrophages : a possible mechanism for inhibition of phagocytosis


Autoria(s): Kedzierska, Katherine; Ellery, Philip; Mak, Johnson; Lewin, Sharon R.; Crowe, Suzanne M.; Jaworowski, Anthony
Data(s)

15/03/2002

Resumo

HIV-1 infection impairs a number of macrophage effector functions, thereby contributing to development of opportunistic infections and the pathogenesis of AIDS. FcγR-mediated phagocytosis by human monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM) is inhibited by HIV-1 infection in vitro, and the underlying mechanism was investigated in this study. Inhibition of phagocytosis directly correlated with the multiplicity of HIV-1 infection. Expression of surface FcγRs was unaffected by HIV-1 infection, suggesting that inhibition of phagocytosis occurred during or after receptor binding. HIV-1 infection of MDM markedly inhibited tyrosine phosphorylation of the cellular proteins, which occurs following engagement of FcγRs, suggesting a defect downstream of initial receptor activation. FcγR-mediated phagocytosis in HIV-infected MDM was associated with inhibition of phosphorylation of tyrosine kinases from two different families, Hck and Syk, defective formation of Syk complexes with other tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins, and inhibition of paxillin activation. Down-modulation of protein expression but not mRNA of the γ signaling subunit of FcγR (a docking site for Syk) was observed in HIV-infected MDM. Infection of MDM with a construct of HIV-1 in which nef was replaced with the gene for the γ signaling subunit augmented FcγR-mediated phagocytosis, suggesting that down-modulation of γ-chain protein expression in HIV-infected MDM caused the defective FcγR-mediated signaling and impairment of phagocytosis. This study is the first to demonstrate a specific alteration in phagocytosis signal transduction pathway, which provides a mechanism for the observed impaired FcγR-mediated phagocytosis in HIV-infected macrophages and contributes to the understanding of how HIV-1 impairs cell-mediated immunity leading to HIV-1 disease progression.<br />

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30047513

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

American Association of Immunologists

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30047513/mak-HIV1down-2002.pdf

http://jimmunol.org/content/168/6/2895.full

Direitos

2002, The American Association of Immunologists

Palavras-Chave #cultured cells #cyclic AMP #cytoskeletal proteins #down-regulation #enzyme precursors #HIV infections #HIV-1 #intracellular signaling peptides and proteins #macrophages #monocytes #paxillin #phagocytosis #phosphoproteins #phosphorylation
Tipo

Journal Article