Snapin promotes HIV ‐1 transmission from dendritic cells by dampening TLR 8 signaling

  • Khatamzas E
  • Hipp M
  • Gaughan D
  • et al.
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Abstract

© 2017 The Authors. Published under the terms of the CC BY 4.0 license HIV-1 traffics through dendritic cells (DCs) en route to establishing a productive infection in T lymphocytes but fails to induce an innate immune response. Within DC endosomes, HIV-1 somehow evades detection by the pattern-recognition receptor (PRR) Toll-like receptor 8 (TLR8). Using a phosphoproteomic approach, we identified a robust and diverse signaling cascade triggered by HIV-1 upon entry into human DCs. A secondary siRNA screen of the identified signaling factors revealed several new mediators of HIV-1 trans-infection of CD4 + T cells in DCs, including the dynein motor protein Snapin. Inhibition of Snapin enhanced localization of HIV-1 with TLR8 + early endosomes, triggered a pro-inflammatory response, and inhibited trans-infection of CD4 + T cells. Snapin inhibited TLR8 signaling in the absence of HIV-1 and is a general regulator of endosomal maturation. Thus, we identify a new mechanism of innate immune sensing by TLR8 in DCs, which is exploited by HIV-1 to promote transmission.

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Khatamzas, E., Hipp, M. M., Gaughan, D., Pichulik, T., Leslie, A., Fernandes, R. A., … Simmons, A. (2017). Snapin promotes HIV ‐1 transmission from dendritic cells by dampening TLR 8 signaling. The EMBO Journal, 36(20), 2998–3011. https://doi.org/10.15252/embj.201695364

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