Author:
Dubrovsky Larisa,Brichacek Beda,Prashant N.M.,Pushkarsky Tatiana,Mukhamedova Nigora,Dragoljevic Dragana,Fitzgerald Michael,Horvath Anelia,Murphy Andrew J.,Sviridov Dmitri,Bukrinsky Michael I
Abstract
SummaryPersistent inflammation is a hallmark of HIV infection and is not reversed after suppression of viral replication by anti-retroviral therapy (ART). One explanation for chronic inflammation in ART-treated HIV-infected individuals is hyperreactivity of the myeloid cells due to a phenomenon called ‘trained immunity’. Here, we demonstrate that human monocyte derived macrophages originating from monocytes initially treated with extracellular vesicles containing HIV-1 protein Nef (exNef), but differentiating in the absence of exNef, released increased levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines after lipopolysaccharide stimulation. This effect was associated with epigenetic changes related to inflammation and cholesterol metabolism pathways, upregulation of the lipid rafts, and was blocked by methyl-β-cyclodextrin, statin, and inhibitor of activity of lipid raft-associated receptor IGF1R. Bone marrow-derived macrophages from exNef-injected mice had higher abundance of lipid rafts and produced elevated levels of TNFα. These phenomena are consistent with trained immunity and may contribute to persistent inflammation and co-morbidities in HIV-infected individuals.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory