Affiliation:
1. Vaccine and Gene Therapy Institute, Oregon Health and Science University, Beaverton, Oregon, USA
2. Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Weill Cornell Medical College, New York, New York, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Kaposi sarcoma (KS) herpesvirus (KSHV) infection of endothelial cells (EC) is associated with strong induction of
heme oxygenase-1
(HO-1), a stress-inducible host gene that encodes the rate-limiting enzyme responsible for heme catabolism. KS is an angioproliferative tumor characterized by the proliferation of KSHV-infected spindle cells, and HO-1 is highly expressed in such cells. HO-1 converts the pro-oxidant, proinflammatory heme molecule into metabolites with antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and proliferative activities. Previously published work has shown that KSHV-infected EC
in vitro
proliferate in response to free heme in a HO-1-dependent manner, thus implicating virus-enhanced HO-1 activity in KS tumorigenesis. The present study investigated the molecular mechanisms underlying KSHV induction of HO-1 in lymphatic EC (LEC), which are the likely spindle cell precursors. In a time course analysis of KSHV-infected cells, HO-1 expression displays biphasic kinetics characterized by an early transient induction that is followed by a more sustained upregulation coincident with the establishment of viral latency. A viral microRNA miR-K12-11 deletion mutant of KSHV was found to be defective for induction of HO-1 during latency. A potential mechanism for this phenotype was provided by BACH1, a cellular
HO-1
transcriptional repressor targeted by miR-K12-11. In fact, in KSHV-infected LEC, the
BACH1
message level is reduced, BACH1 subcellular localization is altered, and miR-K12-11 mediates the inverse regulation of
HO-1
and
BACH1
during viral latency. Interestingly, the data indicate that neither miR-K12-11 nor
de novo
KSHV gene expression is required for the burst of HO-1 expression observed at early times postinfection, which suggests that additional virion components promote this phenotype.
IMPORTANCE
While the mechanisms underlying KSHV induction of HO-1 remain unknown, the cellular mechanisms that regulate HO-1 expression have been extensively investigated in the context of basal and pathophysiological states. The detoxifying action of HO-1 is critical for the protection of cells exposed to high heme levels. KS spindle cells are erythrophagocytic and contain erythrocyte ghosts. Erythrocyte degeneration leads to the localized release of heme, creating oxidative stress that may be further exacerbated by environmental or other cofactors. Our previous work showed that KSHV-infected cells proliferate in response to heme and that this occurs in a HO-1-dependent manner. We therefore hypothesize that KSHV induction of HO-1 contributes to KS tumor development via heme metabolism and propose that HO-1 be evaluated as a therapeutic target for KS. Our present work, which aimed to understand the mechanisms whereby KSHV induces HO-1, will be important for the design and implementation of such a strategy.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
14 articles.
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