AI Article Synopsis

  • AIBP (Apolipoprotein A-I binding protein) regulates lipid rafts and cholesterol efflux, and is shown to inhibit HIV replication by reducing lipid raft abundance and virus-cell fusion.
  • Exogenously added AIBP was more effective in macrophages compared to T cells, and the presence of Nef proteins in the virus or exosomes is necessary for AIBP to inhibit HIV fusion with MDMs.
  • Donors with the HLA-B*35 genotype, linked to rapid HIV disease progression, showed lower binding of AIBP, resulting in increased HIV replication, highlighting the role of AIBP as an innate factor in limiting HIV spread.

Article Abstract

Apolipoprotein A-I binding protein (AIBP) is a protein involved in regulation of lipid rafts and cholesterol efflux. AIBP has been suggested to function as a protective factor under several sets of pathological conditions associated with increased abundance of lipid rafts, such as atherosclerosis and acute lung injury. Here, we show that exogenously added AIBP reduced the abundance of lipid rafts and inhibited HIV replication as well as in HIV-infected humanized mice, whereas knockdown of endogenous AIBP increased HIV replication. Endogenous AIBP was much more abundant in activated T cells than in monocyte-derived macrophages (MDMs), and exogenous AIBP was much less effective in T cells than in MDMs. AIBP inhibited virus-cell fusion, specifically targeting cells with lipid rafts mobilized by cell activation or Nef-containing exosomes. MDM-HIV fusion was sensitive to AIBP only in the presence of Nef provided by the virus or exosomes. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells from donors with the HLA-B*35 genotype, associated with rapid progression of HIV disease, bound less AIBP than cells from donors with other HLA genotypes and were not protected by AIBP from rapid HIV-1 replication. These results provide the first evidence for the role of Nef exosomes in regulating HIV-cell fusion by modifying lipid rafts and suggest that AIBP is an innate factor that restricts HIV replication by targeting lipid rafts. Apolipoprotein A-I binding protein (AIBP) is a recently identified innate anti-inflammatory factor. Here, we show that AIBP inhibited HIV replication by targeting lipid rafts and reducing virus-cell fusion. Importantly, AIBP selectively reduced levels of rafts on cells stimulated by an inflammatory stimulus or treated with extracellular vesicles containing HIV-1 protein Nef without affecting rafts on nonactivated cells. Accordingly, fusion of monocyte-derived macrophages with HIV was sensitive to AIBP only in the presence of Nef. Silencing of endogenous AIBP significantly upregulated HIV-1 replication. Interestingly, HIV-1 replication in cells from donors with the HLA-B*35 genotype, associated with rapid progression of HIV disease, was not inhibited by AIBP. These results suggest that AIBP is an innate anti-HIV factor that targets virus-cell fusion.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6974568PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.02956-19DOI Listing

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