Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10748621 | Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2016 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Human Immunodeficiency Virus-1 (HIV-1) encodes a 27Â kDa Negative Factor or Nef protein, which is increasingly proving to be a misnomer. Nef seems to be crucial for AIDS progression as individuals infected with nef-deleted strain of HIV were reported to become Long Term Non Progressors (LTNP). These findings necessitate tracing of Nef's footprint on landscape of cellular transcriptome favoring HIV-1 pathogenesis. We have tried to explore effect of Nef on cellular gene expression profile in conjunction with rest of HIV-1 proteins. Our results show that 237 genes are differentially regulated due to the presence of Nef during infection, which belong to several broad categories like “signaling”, “apoptosis”, “transcription” and “lipid metabolism” in gene ontology analysis. Furthermore, our results show that Nef causes disruption of lipid content in HIV-1 infected T cells. Molecular inhibitors of lipid metabolism like Atorvastatin and Ranolazine were found to have profound effect on wild type virus as compared to nef-deleted HIV-1. Thus our results suggest that interference in lipid metabolism is a potential mechanism through which Nef contributes in enhancing HIV-1 pathogenesis.
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Authors
Surya Shrivastava, Jay Trivedi, Debashis Mitra,