Abstract:
Background
The relationship between host microRNAs (miRNA), viral control and immune response
has not yet been elucidated in the field of HIV. The aim of this study was to assess the differ ential miRNA profile in CD8+ T-cells between HIV-infected individuals who differ in terms of
viral replication control and immune response.
Methods
miRNA profile from resting and CD3/CD28-stimulated CD8+ T-cells from uninfected individ uals (HIV-, n = 11), Elite Controllers (EC, n = 15), Viremic Controllers (VC, n = 15), Viremic
Progressors (VP, n = 13) and HIV-infected patients on therapy (ART, n = 14) was assessed
using Affymetrix miRNA 3.1 arrays. After background correction, quantile normalization and
median polish summarization, normalized data were fit to a linear model. The analysis com prised: resting samples between groups; stimulated samples between groups; and stimu lated versus resting samples within each group. Enrichment analyses of the putative target
genes were perfomed using bioinformatic algorithms.
PLOS ONE | DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0155245 May 12, 2016 1 / 19
a11111
OPEN ACCESS
Citation: Egaña-Gorroño L, Guardo AC, Bargalló
ME, Planet E, Vilaplana E, Escribà T, et al. (2016)
MicroRNA Profile in CD8+ T-Lymphocytes from HIV Infected Individuals: Relationship with Antiviral
Immune Response and Disease Progression. PLoS
ONE 11(5): e0155245. doi:10.1371/journal.
pone.0155245
Editor: Mathias Lichterfeld, Massachusetts General
Hospital, UNITED STATES
Received: February 3, 2016
Accepted: April 26, 2016
Published: May 12, 2016
Copyright: © 2016 Egaña-Gorroño et al. This is an
open access article distributed under the terms of the
Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits
unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any
medium, provided the original author and source are
credited.
Data Availability Statement: Raw data and
corrected, quantile and median polished normalized
data from Affymetrix miRNA 3.1 strip arrays were
deposited with the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO:
NCBI Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) http://www.
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/) and are accessible at Series
record number GSE71650.
Funding: The authors are grateful to all the patients
and donors who participated in the study and thank
the Retrovirology and Viral Immunopathology
Laboratory of the Institut d`Investigacions
Results
A downregulated miRNA pattern was observed when resting samples from all infected
groups were compared to HIV-. A miRNA downregulation was also observed when stimu lated samples from EC, ART and HIV- groups were compared to VP, being hsa-miR-4492
the most downregulated. Although a preferential miRNA downregulation was observed
when stimulated samples were compared to the respective resting samples, VP presented
a differential miRNA expression pattern. In fact, hsa-miR-155 and hsa-miR-181a were
downregulated in VP whereas in the other groups, either an upregulation or no differences
were observed after stimulation, respectively. Overall, functional enrichment analysis
revealed that the predicted target genes were involved in signal transduction pathways,
metabolic regulation, apoptosis, and immune response.
Conclusions
Resting CD8+ T-cells do not exhibit a differential miRNA expression between HIV-infected
individuals but they do differ from non-infected individuals. Moreover, a specific miRNA pat tern is present in stimulated CD8+ T-cells from VP which could reflect a detrimental pattern
in terms of CD8+ T-cell immune response