Abstract
Urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) signaling via its receptor uPAR inhibits late events in HIV-1 replication in acutely infected primary monocyte-derived macrophages (MDMs) and promonocytic U937 cells. Here we show that U937-derived, chronically infected U1 cells stimulated with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) express integrins, uPA, and soluble uPAR at levels similar to those of MDMs. uPA inhibited HIV expression in U1 cells incubated with either PMA or tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), but not with other HIV-inductive cytokines or lipopolysaccharide. Of interest, only PMA and TNF-α, but not other HIV-inductive stimuli, induced surface expression of the αM chain CD11b in U1 cells constitutively expressing CD18, the β2 chain of the Mac-1 integrin. Like uPA, fibrinogen, a Mac-1 (CD11b/CD18) ligand, and M25, a peptide homologous to a portion of the β-propeller region of CD11b preventing its association with uPAR, inhibited HIV virion release in PMA-stimulated U1 cells. Both uPAR small-interference RNA (siRNA) and soluble anti-β1/-β2 monoclonal antibodies abolished the anti-HIV effects of uPA, whereas CD11b siRNA reversed the anti-HIV effect of M25, but not that induced by uPA. Thus, either uPA/uPAR interaction, Mac-1 activation, or prevention of its association with uPAR triggers a signaling pathway leading to the inefficient release of HIV from monocytic cells.
Introduction
Urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA), a serine protease that activates plasminogen to plasmin,1 is synthesized as an inactive precursor (pro-uPA) that undergoes a rapid proteolytic activation. uPA binds to a specific glycosyl-phospatidyl-inositol (GPI)–anchored receptor, uPAR, localized at the cell surface.2 Both uPA and uPAR are expressed by inflammatory cells, including neutrophils, monocytes, macrophages, and activated T lymphocytes,2 in which they play important roles in cell activation, adhesion, and migration.3,4 In addition to localizing the enzymatic activity of uPA on the leading edge of migrating cells, uPAR mediates signaling by uPA.5 The binding of uPA to uPAR induces migration, adhesion, and proliferation of different cell types, independent of the catalytic activity of uPA.6,7 As a GPI receptor lacking an intracellular domain, uPAR requires the interaction with transduction-competent receptors, such as the G-protein–coupled receptor formyl peptide receptor-like–1 (FPRL1),5 the gp130 signal–transducing chain of the interleukin-6 (IL-6) receptor family,8 or integrins such as α5β1 in epidermal cancer cells and CD11b/CD18 (Mac-1) in monocyte-macrophages.5,6,9,10
High serum and cerebrospinal spinal fluid levels of soluble uPAR (suPAR) have been correlated with the severity of HIV-1 disease independent of CD4+ T-cell counts or viremia levels.11-14 Furthermore, uPA expression has been observed in the brains of HIV+ individuals whose brains stained negatively for both HIV-1 p24 Gag antigen and uPAR,15 suggesting a potential role of uPA as a negative regulator of HIV-1 expression. In vitro, uPA inhibits HIV-1 replication in lymphoid histocultures, primary monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM), promonocytic U937 cells acutely infected with HIV, and chronically infected promonocytic U1 cells stimulated with the differentiating agent phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) or tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α).16,17 In particular, uPA was shown to promote the sequestration of HIV particles in cytoplasmic vacuoles, likely belonging to multivescicular bodies,18-20 an effect that was fully accounted for by the signaling-competent amino-terminal fragment (ATF) of uPA.5 More recently, we showed that vitronectin (VN)–dependent cell adhesion is crucial for uPA-mediated inhibition of virus replication in MDM and in PMA-stimulated U1 cells.17 A better definition of this signaling pathway and of its determinants may be relevant for understanding the dynamics of tissue seeding by infected leukocytes that may affect their ability or efficiency to establish HIV reservoirs in sanctuary sites21 and cause organ/tissue-specific pathology, such as HIV-associated dementia, interstitial lung disease, nephropathy, enteropathy, and wasting syndrome.22,23
In the present study we investigated which among the known uPAR-associated signaling-competent receptors mediate its inhibitory signal on HIV-1 expression in monocytic cells. Our findings indicate that such an inhibitory effect is mediated by β1 and/or β2 integrins, but does not require the expression of CD11b. In addition, we demonstrated that stimulation of the Mac-1 integrin by fibrinogen (FNG) or prevention of the association between CD11b and uPAR fully mimicked uPA/uPAR-dependent inhibition of late events in virus expression. These findings reinforce the hypothesis of a common pathway controlling the late phase of HIV assembly and release from infected monocytic cells.
Methods
Reagents
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)–free (< 2 × 10−5 EU/IU, corresponding to < 10−10 EU/mg) human pro-uPA (52 kDa) was provided by Dr Jack Henkin (Abbott Laboratories, Abbott Park, IL). The ATF peptide was purchased from American Diagnostica (Stamford, CT). Pro-uPA and ATF were used at 10 nM. FNG, phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PIPLC) from Bacillus cereus, crystal violet, goat anti–mouse fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) antibody (Ab), rabbit anti–goat FITC Ab, and PMA were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St Louis, MO). Interleukin-6 (IL-6) and interferon-γ (IFN-γ) were purchased from R&D Systems (Minneapolis, MN). PMA, IL-6, and IFN-γ were resuspended as recommended by the manufacturers and used at final concentrations of 6, 10, and 50 ng/mL, respectively, based on previous studies. PIPLC was resuspended at 20 U/mL in culture medium and used at the final concentration of 10 U/mL. M25 (PRYQHIGLVAMFRQNTG) and its scrambled peptide (scM25, HQIPGAYRGVNQRFTML) were purchased from PRIMM (Milan, Italy) and dissolved at 20 mM in dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) and used at the indicated concentrations. A list of antibodies used and their sources is provided in Table S1 (available on the Blood website; see the Supplemental Materials link at the top of the online article). All experiments were performed in 96-well microtiter plates (Falcon; BD Biosciences, Bedford, MA) unless otherwise specified.
Quantification of uPA and suPAR secretion
Both molecules were measured in culture supernatants of U1 cells and MDM. uPA concentrations were measured by a commercial kit (IMUBIND uPA ELISA kit no. 894; American Diagnostica, Greenwich, CT) with a lower detection limit of 10 pg/mL. Concentrations of suPAR and the uPA-suPAR complex were determined using an in-house sandwich ELISA. In this assay, suPAR is captured using a monoclonal Ab (mAb) as capture Ab and the associated uPA is detected using a polyclonal Ab directed against uPA. This assay does not detect suPAR and uPA alone but displays a linear dose-response to complexes between suPAR and uPA, as previously described.14,15
Chronically HIV-infected U1 cell line
The promonocytic U1 cell line contains 2 copies of integrated X4 HIV-1LAI/IIIB provirus per cell, and it is characterized by a constitutive state of relative viral latency.24 High levels of virus expression are rapidly induced by stimulation of U1 cells with either PMA or cytokines.25,26 U1 cells were stimulated at the concentration of 2 × 105 cells/mL in RPMI 1640 containing 10% of heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum (FBS), and were first incubated with either uPA or peptides 30 minutes before the addition of PMA or HIV-inductive stimuli.
U1 cell adhesion assay
U1 cells were resuspended in culture medium containing 10% FBS and left either unstimulated or stimulated and seeded in triplicates into 96-well tissue-culture plates. At the indicated time points, cells were washed with warm culture medium, fixed for 15 minutes with 3% paraphormaldehyde in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), stained for 10 minutes with 0.5% crystal violet (in 20% methanol/80% water), washed 3 times and lysed with 100 μL 1% sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) in water. The results were obtained by measuring the absorbance at 570 nm.
Acute CCR5-dependent infection of primary human monocyte-derived macrophages
Circulating monocytes were isolated from Ficoll-Hypaque purified peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of several independent, healthy, HIV-1–seronegative donors by iso-osmotic Percoll gradient.27 Their purity was approximately 90% based on morphology and CD14 staining (data not shown). Monocytes were allowed to differentiate for 7 days in culture in Dulbecco modified eagle medium (DMEM) enriched with 10% FBS and 10% human AB serum before infection.17 Thus, human MDMs were treated for 30 minutes with uPA or ATF and then infected with the CCR5-dependent (R5) laboratory-adapted HIV-1BaL strain at the multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 0.1.17 MDM cultures were carried on for 3 to 4 weeks after infection and supernatants were collected every 3 to 4 days and stored at −20°C for determination of their reverse transcriptase (RT) activity content. Collected culture supernatants were replenished with fresh culture medium, with uPA or ATF for treated cultures.
Acute X4 HIV-1 infection of the human promonocytic U937 cell line
U937 cells were resuspended in RPMI 1640 plus 10% FBS and infected with the laboratory-adapted X4 HIV-1LAI/IIIB strain at the MOI of 1 after 30 minutes' preincubation with FNG. Cell cultures were carried on for 3 to 4 weeks after infection and supernatants were collected every 2 to 3 days and stored at −20°C for determination of their RT activity content. Collected culture supernatants were replenished with fresh culture medium, with FNG for treated cultures.
HIV-1 quantification by RT activity assay
Cytofluorimetric analysis
U1 cells were washed twice in 2% FBS/PBS and stained by using the indicated Ab at 1 μg/105 cells unless otherwise specified. After 30 minutes of incubation on ice, U1 cells were centrifuged twice in 2% FBS/PBS at 390g for 5 minutes at +4°C; the cells were then incubated with 1 μg of the secondary anti–mouse-FITC or anti–rabbit-FITC Ab. The cells were spun again after 30 minutes of incubation on ice and resuspended in 2% formaldehyde/PBS. Fifteen thousand cells were acquired using a FACScan (Becton Dickinson, Franklin Lakes, NJ) flow cytometry apparatus and analyzed by CellQuest software (Becton Dickinson).
Cell proliferation
Cell proliferation was assessed by the uptake of [3H]-thymidine. [3H]-thymidine (3.7 × 107 Bq) was added to 4 × 104 cells in 200 μL medium and incubated 16 hours at 37°C, 5% CO2. Cells were harvested and the β emission was counted in a 1450 β-counter (1450 Microbeta Plus; PerkinElmer Life and Analytical Sciences, Waltham, MA).
siRNA transient transfection
Three pairs of validated stealth small-interference RNA (siRNA; 25 nt) for each target antigen were purchased from Invitrogen (Paisley, United Kingdom) and resuspended at the final concentration of 20 μM in diethyl pyrocarbonate (DEPC)–treated water, as detailed in Table S1. Typically, 2 × 106 cells were transfected with 1 μM siRNA, then resuspended at 106 cells/mL and finally diluted 4 hours later at 2 × 105 cells/mL before incubation with uPA and stimuli. Cells transiently transfected with irrelevant stealth siRNA duplex containing 45% to 55% GC (Mock siRNA; Invitrogen) were used as negative controls.
Statistical analysis
Results are reported as mean values plus or minus standard deviation (SD), and the analysis of variance was performed by a 2-tailed Student t test to calculate P values for paired observations (unless otherwise specified). The observed differences were considered significant if the P value obtained was below .05.
Results
The anti-HIV activity of uPA depends on its ATF–receptor- binding domain and the cell-surface expression of uPAR
Exogenously added pro-uPA is immediately cleaved in vitro into its active form, uPA, by the plasmin present in the cell-culture serum-enriched medium.29 The anti-HIV effect of uPA on stimulated U1 cells was already shown to be dependent on its receptor-interacting component, ATF, and not on its catalytic activity.16,17 This finding was confirmed here, in that only uPA peptides maintaining an ATF growth factor-like domain,30 including the so-called Omega loop,30 but not the enzymatically competent low molecular weight fragment, inhibited HIV expression in chronically infected U1 cells stimulated with either PMA (Figure 1A) or TNF-α (data not shown).
To demonstrate the essential role of the GPI-anchored protein uPAR31 in uPA-mediated HIV inhibitory signals, U1 cells were incubated with PIPLC from B cereus that specifically removes GPI anchors.32 PIPLC indeed reduced the expression of uPAR on U1 cell surfaces 2 to 24 hours after incubation, as measured by cytofluorimetric analysis (Figure 1B). Concomitantly, PIPLC promoted the release of suPAR in the culture supernatant, at concentrations from 33 pM (Table 1) to 220 pM (not shown), while it did not modulate the cell-surface expression of non–GPI-anchored receptors including integrins, as measured by FACS analysis (data not shown). PIPLC did not interfere with HIV expression in either unstimulated or PMA-stimulated U1 cells (Figure 1C), suggesting that neither uPAR per se nor endogenous uPA play a significant role in HIV-1 expression in U1 cells. In contrast, PIPLC abrogated the anti-HIV activity of exogenous uPA (Figure 1C) without any cytotoxic or cytostatic effects, as tested by [3H]-thymidine uptake (data not shown).
We next determined the concentrations of uPA, suPAR, and of their complex in culture supernatants of both unstimulated and stimulated U1 cells (Table 1). Most of the uPA released from stimulated U1 cells was indeed complexed with suPAR (Table 1), as previously reported in vivo.15 Addition of suPAR did not alter HIV expression per se from either unstimulated or PMA-stimulated U1 cells (Figure 1D). Furthermore, suPAR did not interfere with HIV-1 replication in acutely infected U937 cells (data not shown, n = 3) reinforcing the concept that its role in virus production is strictly related to mediating uPA-dependent cell signaling. In contrast, a 20:1 molar excess of suPAR to uPA abrogated the anti-HIV activity of uPA (Figure 1D), whereas, vice versa, a 5:1 excess of uPA to suPAR overcame the inhibitory effect of suPAR (data not shown).
ATF inhibits HIV replication in primary human MDMs
We have previously reported that uPA inhibits virus replication in primary MDM17 and we here report that exogenously added ATF exerts an anti-HIV activity in vitro–infected MDMs established from several donors (Figure 2A).
Both uninfected and infected MDMs released approximately 3-fold more uPA and 6-fold more suPAR than U1 cells on a per cell basis (Table 1). However, as observed in U1 cells, most soluble uPA was complexed by suPAR in MDMs, with a suPAR/uPA ratio always greater than 20 (Table 1). There was not a significant correlation between the levels of released uPA and suPAR in infected MDMs (Figure 2B), or between the levels of released uPA or suPAR and peak HIV replication in MDMs, although there was a trend toward higher levels of (complexed) uPA and more virus production (Figure 2C).
PMA and TNF-α, but not other HIV-inductive stimuli, up-regulate CD11b expression in U1 cells
Unstimulated U1 cells showed constitutive cell-surface expression of uPAR and CD18, but negligible presence of CD11b (Table 2; Figure 3A). PMA stimulation up-regulated the levels of cell-surface uPAR (reaching a plateau approximately 20 hours after stimulation, as previously reported in both U93733 and MCF-7 cells34 ) and induced the expression of CD11b, thus allowing the formation of Mac-1 (Figure 3A top panels). Superimposable results, although inducing lower levels of CD11b expression, were observed by TNF-α stimulation (Figure 3A middle panels). In contrast, IL-6 strongly up-regulated both HIV-1 and uPAR expression, but failed to induce detectable levels of CD11b (Figure 3A bottom panels). Of interest, uPA inhibited HIV expression in U1 cells stimulated with both PMA and TNF-α, but not with IL-6 (Figure 3B). U1 cells were also stimulated with IFN-γ or granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) plus LPS,35-37 which up-regulated virus expression to comparable levels, in the presence and absence of uPA.26 However, both IFN-γ and GM-CSF plus PLS did not induce expression of CD11b (data not shown); concomitantly, uPA failed to inhibit HIV production induced by these stimuli.
Among other uPA coreceptors and integrin chains expressed by U1 cells, neither FPRL1, nor α5β1, α6, and αX integrin chains were involved in uPA-mediated inhibition of HIV expression (see Table S1 and Figures S1,S2).
The Mac-1 ligand FNG inhibits late events of HIV expression in U1 cells and in acutely infected U937 cells
We next evaluated whether known Mac-1 ligands could also affect HIV expression in either PMA or TNF-α stimulated U1 cells in the absence of uPA. U1 cells were incubated with FNG, known to bind to both Mac-138 and the VN receptor αVβ3 (which, however, was not expressed by U1 cells, as shown in Table 2)17 ; the cells were then stimulated by either PMA or HIV-inductive cytokines. Incubation of U1 cells with FNG in the absence of other stimuli did not activate HIV expression (data not shown); however, FNG inhibited HIV expression in U1 cells stimulated with PMA (Figure 4A), but not with IL-6 (data not shown). As with uPA inhibition,16 FNG inhibition of HIV expression in PMA-stimulated U1 cells was reversed by cell disruption (Figure 4B). Furthermore, FNG inhibited the acute replication of X4 HIV-1 in U937 cells (Figure 4C). As observed with U1 cells, U937 cell disruption at time points before and after the peak of HIV replication restored the levels of RT activity to those of control cells (Figure 4D).
Preventing association of CD11b/CD18 from uPAR in the absence of receptor ligands inhibits HIV-1 expression
To investigate the role of Mac-1 interaction with uPAR in terms of inhibition of HIV expression, we tested the potential effect of M2, a peptide known to prevent or disrupt the integrin association with uPAR.39 Surprisingly, M25 alone, but not its control scrambled peptide, inhibited HIV expression in PMA-stimulated U1 cells in the absence of uPA in a concentration-dependent fashion, reaching more than 90% inhibition at 80 μM (Figure 5A). Furthermore, M25 inhibited the residual levels of RT activity in the presence of uPA (Figure 5A); identical results were obtained in U1 cells stimulated with TNF-α (data not shown). The M25 anti-HIV mechanism resembled that induced by both uPA and FNG in that it was fully reverted by cell disruption (Figure 5B), suggesting that prevention of the association between Mac-1 and uPAR triggers an inhibitory pathway of HIV-1 particle release.
The anti-HIV effect triggered by uPA/uPAR interaction is independent of CD11b
Experiments were next carried out after transfection of U1 cells with siRNA directed to either uPAR or CD11b. As shown earlier, the constitutive levels of expression of uPAR in U1 cells were enhanced by 24-hour stimulation with PMA (Figure 6A top left panel), while CD11b, which was not expressed by unstimulated cells, was clearly induced by PMA (Figure 6A top right panel). Transfection with their respective siRNA partially reduced the expression of uPAR (Figure 6A bottom left panel) while it abrogated PMA-induced CD11b expression (Figure 6A bottom right panel); these suppressive effects were stable for at least 3 days after cell stimulation (data not shown).
Mock siRNA did not alter the inhibitory effects of either uPA or M25 on HIV production, while CD11b siRNA abolished the anti-HIV activity of M25 but did not affect the inhibitory capacity of uPA (Figure 6B left and right panels, respectively). In contrast, the reduced expression of uPAR abolished the anti-HIV activity of both uPA and M25 peptide (Figure 6B middle panel).
Given the dependence of uPA anti-HIV effect on VN-mediated cell adhesion,40 we next investigated the potential interference of these siRNAs on U1 cell adhesion to the plastic substrate in the presence to either uPA or M25. As expected, M25 did not affect plastic adhesion of both unstimulated (not shown) and PMA-stimulated U1 cells (Figure 6C). Transfection with CD11b siRNA did not alter the ability of uPA to induce U1 cell adhesion, whereas this effect was lost in U1 cells transfected with uPAR siRNA (Figure 6C).
Cell adhesion–dependent uPA inhibition of HIV expression involves integrin β chains
We then investigated the potential contribution of β1 and β2 integrin chains. Different anti-integrin blocking Abs were used to coat the plastic of tissue-culture microwells, thereby inducing integrin-dependent cell adhesion.40 In addition, we tested the same Abs in suspension to prevent cell clustering by homotypic interactions.41
Plates coated with Abs recognizing antigens not expressed by unstimulated U1 cells, such as CD3 and CD11b (Table 2), failed to induce cell adhesion (Figure 7 top panel). In contrast, Abs recognizing β1, but not β2, integrin chains induced cell adhesion in both unstimulated and uPA-stimulated cells (Figure 7 top panel). PMA stimulation enhanced the levels of cell adhesion in plates coated with anti-CD11a, anti-CD11b, and anti-β1, but not anti-β2, integrin chains (Figure 7 top panel). Consistently, uPA increased the levels of cell adhesion in PMA-stimulated cells in plates coated with Abs directed against CD11a, CD11b, β1, but not β2, integrin chains. As expected, when Abs were added in suspension, either no adhesion or reduced levels of adhesion were observed in comparison to what was observed in the analogous Ab-coated plates (Figure 7 top panel).
None of the Abs tested modified the levels of HIV expression in unstimulated cells or cells incubated with uPA alone (Figure 7 bottom panel). When U1 cells were stimulated with PMA, no effects were observed in the presence of all tested Abs, except in plates coated with anti-CD11b that inhibited virus production, while no effects were observed when this Ab was diluted in cell culture supernatants. UPA maintained its anti-HIV activity in all tested conditions except in the presence of soluble anti-β1 and anti-β2 integrin chains that abolished its antiviral effect, without affecting uPA-mediated enhancement of PMA-induced cell adhesion.
Thus, the cell adhesion–dependent antiviral signal triggered by uPA binding to uPAR requires downstream activation of β integrin chains.
Discussion
In the present study we investigated the role of potential signaling partners mediating uPA/uPAR-dependent inhibition of late events in HIV-1 replication in monocytic cells such as primary MDMs, and promonocytic U1 and U937 cells lines. UPA anti-HIV activity in U1 cells was restricted to PMA and TNF-α stimulation, but was ineffective when these cells were stimulated with other cytokines or LPS. This restricted pattern of the uPA-mediated anti-HIV effect was paralleled by the up-regulation of CD11b on the surface of U1 cells which constitutively expressed the β2 chain (CD18) to form Mac-1 (also known as complement receptor-3) known to provide signaling competence to the uPA/uPAR complex in myelomonocytic cells. Independent of uPA/uPAR, FNG binding to Mac-1 inhibited late events in HIV production in both stimulated U1 cells and acutely infected U937 cells. Furthermore, prevention of uPAR association with CD11b by the M25 peptide showed similar HIV-inhibitory effects in PMA-stimulated U1 cells. siRNA targeting uPAR reversed the inhibitory effect of both uPA and M25, whereas siRNA-mediated down-regulation of CD11b abolished M25 but did not affect uPA-dependent antiviral effect. Soluble Ab directed against β1 and/or β2 integrin chains, but not against the α chains of CD11a-b-c, prevented uPA interference with HIV expression. These findings suggest a model whereby a similar, if not identical, anti-HIV signal, interfering with late events in the virus life cycle, is triggered by uPA binding to uPAR and by uPAR-independent ligation of Mac-1 or prevention of the interaction between CD11b and uPAR.
As observed in cancer,42 the uPA/uPAR system plays a relevant role in HIV disease. Soluble levels of suPAR represent a potent predictor of HIV disease progression, independent of the levels of peripheral CD4+ T-cell counts and viremia.11 These observations were extended and confirmed in patients with HIV-associated dementia.14,15 Cultivation and infection of both primary MDMs and promonocytic cell lines, such as U1 and U937, revealed that both uPA and suPAR levels are expressed in vitro at levels similar to those observed in vivo.15 Furthermore, in vitro–released uPA was mostly complexed with suPAR (Table 1), as described in vivo.15 This observation likely accounts for the lack of evidence of an autocrine/paracrine role of endogenous uPA on HIV replication in our model systems. Because free uPA inhibits acute HIV-1 replication in primary MDMs and U937 cells as well as virus expression in chronically infected U1 cells,16 its sequestration by suPAR to form a biologically inactive uPA-suPAR complex may indeed prevent the anti-HIV effects of uPA. These findings provide a potential explanation for the CD4 and viremia independent prognostic value of increased suPAR concentrations in HIV disease progression.
Furthermore, HIV-1 infection of primary MDMs did not alter levels of expression of uPA and suPAR (Table 1). This observation may account for the lack of correlation between circulating levels of uPA and suPAR and viremia.11 In contrast, suPAR levels were found to be strictly correlated with the state of immune activation in HIV-infected individuals, as determined by the serum levels of TNF-α,43 sTNFrII,12,44 CCL2, CCL4, and CCL5.45 suPAR levels also correlate with lipid and glucose metabolism in HIV-infected individuals,43,46 as was reflected in vitro by a trend of association among the levels of HIV-1 replication in acutely infected MDMs and the levels of suPAR and uPA-suPAR complexes (Figure 2).
uPA-dependent inhibition of virus expression in U1 cells was restricted to PMA and TNF-α stimulation, while other HIV-inductive stimuli (including IL-6, IFN-γ, and GM-CSF plus LPS) were unaffected. Of interest, both PMA and TNF-α up-regulate HIV expression via activation of NF-κB,47 whereas the other stimuli act by activation of an ERK-1/-2 AP-1–dependent pathway up-regulating virus transcription.26,48 Since the inhibitory effect of uPA occurs at a posttranscriptional/posttranslational level resulting in the accumulation of virions in intracellular vacuoles,16,49 the selectivity of the anti-HIV effect of uPA was unlikely related to interference with virus transcription, as previously described.16,17,49
We previously demonstrated that the catalytic component of uPA was dispensable for its anti-HIV effects, unlike its signaling component ATF,16,49 as here confirmed in stimulated U1 cells with smaller ATF peptides and primary MDMs. Removal of uPAR, by either cleavage of its GPI anchor or reduction of its expression by means of siRNA, resulted in the abolition of the antiviral effect of uPA. Because uPAR is a GPI-anchored receptor, signal transduction is usually mediated by other receptors and, in monocytic cells, either by FPRLI50 or by integrins such as Mac-1.51 Indeed, both FPRLI and some integrins, including αVβ5, α5β1, and other chains, were constitutively expressed by U1 cells and not affected by HIV-inductive stimuli. However, no evidence of interference with uPA-dependent anti-HIV effects was obtained by incubating U1 cells with agonists of either FPRL1 or these integrins.
Unstimulated U1 cells express abundant levels of the integrin β chain CD18, but not of the α chains CD11b or CD11c. Only PMA and TNF-α up-regulated the expression of CD11b and CD11c, as reported,52 suggesting that the uPA anti-HIV effect could be mediated by either Mac-1 (CD11b/CD18) or p150/95 (CD11c/CD18). However, prevention of CD11c expression by means of siRNA did not affect HIV expression in PMA-stimulated cells (data not shown), while different CD11b ligands, including FNG and anti-CD11b mAb (on coated plates) triggered an HIV-inhibitory signal in PMA-stimulated U1 cells. Like uPA, FNG interfered with the late stage of virus production both in U1 and acutely infected U937 cells. Before our observation, Mac-1 was shown to enhance CD4/CCR5-dependent HIV entry in monocytes, macrophages, and dendritic cells,53-55 whereas, conversely, several Mac-1 ligands, including FNG, have shown inhibitory effects on the enhancement of opsonized HIV infection.53-55 Of interest, another Mac-1 ligand, soluble CD16 (sCD16), was reported to be significantly decreased in HIV disease progression.53,56 In addition, intercellular adhesion molecule-1, a ligand of Mac-1, is incorporated into the virion envelope.57 A confounding aspect of the role of Mac-1 in HIV replication is the observation that ligation of the β2 integrin chain CD18 by immobilized Ab has been shown to increase HIV transcriptional activation in THP1 monocytic cells.58,59 Similar results were described in primary monocytes and U937 cells in the presence of FNG,52,54 in U1 cells cocultivated with HUVEC,60 and in chronically infected promyelocytic OM10.1 cells in which an autocrine release of TNF-α was involved in the up-regulation of virus expression.58,59 However, the adhesion of LPS-stimulated THP1 cells to tissue-culture plastic has been reported to down-regulate the release of HIV virions in both stimulated THP1 cell lines and primary MDMs.58 In agreement with these earlier observations, we have previously reported that the abolition of uPA inhibitory effects and up-regulation of virus production was observed in both acutely infected MDMs and PMA-stimulated U1 cells cultivated in the absence of VN or in nonadherent conditions obtained on Teflon-coated plates.17
Quite surprisingly, incubation of U1 cells with M25, a peptide derived from the β propeller region of CD11b known to disrupt its association with uPAR,61 also inhibited late events in HIV expression in PMA-stimulated U1 cells. Since CD11b is not expressed in unstimulated U1 cells, M25 likely prevents its association with uPAR after PMA stimulation. Thus, expression of Mac-1 uncoupled from uPAR leads to an inhibitory effect on HIV expression independent of the exogenous addition of either uPA or integrin ligands other than those present in the culture medium (such as heat-inactivated C3). In this regard, disruption of uPAR-integrin interaction has been previously shown to prevent the association between β integrin and Src kinases, thereby affecting adhesion-dependent signal transduction.62 This effect has been linked to the ability of uPAR to stabilize complexes of caveolin, integrins, and Src kinases ultimately responsible for adhesion-dependent signaling.62
Interference with either uPAR or CD11b expression by siRNA resulted in different biologic effects. UPAR targeting siRNA, as well as PIPLC treatment, only partially decreased the levels of uPAR expression in PMA-stimulated U1 cells, yet it abolished uPA and M25 anti-HIV effects. Conversely, almost complete prevention of CD11b expression by siRNA resulted in the expected loss of the M25 anti-HIV effect, but was irrelevant for uPA-dependent effects on HIV expression and cell adhesion. These results suggest that uPAR may functionally replace CD11b in terms of triggering a β chain–dependent anti-HIV signal, as previously suggested.63 In this regard, uPA may promote an indirect activation of β1 and β2 integrin chains after the recruitment of VN to form a uPA/uPAR/VN supercomplex competent of mediating cell adhesion and mechanotransduction.64 In support of this interpretation, soluble anti-β1 and anti-β2 Ab did not prevent uPA induced cell adhesion, as recently reported,65 while they fully prevented the anti-HIV effect of uPA. Overall these results suggest that an interplay between integrins and uPAR may occur in lipid rafts known to play a fundamental role in both viral entry47 and in the exit of new progeny virions from infected cells.66
In addition to uPA/uPAR and Mac-1 and its ligands, other extracellular stimuli, including IFN-γ67 and CCL2/MCP-1,68 have been previously shown to inhibit virion release by favoring intracellular virion accumulation. In this regard, assembly and release of HIV virions in multivescicular bodies belonging to the hexosomal pathway69 are crucial aspects characterizing the infection of macrophages.69 Although the relevance of intracellular virion accumulation in macrophages has been recently questioned,70,71 different monocytic cells, including U937, HL-60, THP1, and MonoMac cells,72 primary monocytes,73,74 and macrophages derived from CD34+ bone marrow precursors75 show accumulation and release of HIV virions in intracellular compartments for several weeks, in addition to their generation at the plasma membrane. Even more important, these morphogenetic features of virion assembly in subcellular vacuolar compartments have been documented in vivo in the brain of individuals with HIV encephalitis.76
In conclusion, our results suggest a general model whereby interacting, yet distinct, ligands can trigger a signaling pathway resulting in the inhibition of HIV spread by interfering with late- stage virion assembly and release in macrophages. At least 3 converging signals leading to this common final pathway can be postulated based on the present results: (1) ligation of uPAR by its natural ligand uPA via its ATF domain; (2) ligand binding and cross-linking of Mac-1; and (3) prevention of uPAR interaction with CD11b resulting in the assembly of Mac-1 dissociated from uPAR. As for other examples of biologic redundancy, these observations suggest that control of HIV assembly, maturation, and virion release are crucial checkpoints for efficient viral spreading from macrophages to other susceptible cell types.
The online version of this article contains a data supplement.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. Therefore, and solely to indicate this fact, this article is hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 USC section 1734.
Acknowledgments
We thank Nicolai Sidenius for testing levels of suPAR and uPA-suPAR complex; Massimo Resnati and Elisabetta Ferrero (San Raffaele Scientific Institute, Milan, Italy) for providing Abs against FPRL1, CD11b, and α1 and α3 integrin chains; and Ji-Ming Wang (National Cancer Institute, Frederick, MD) for kind provision of the W peptide.
This study was supported in part by a grant from the VI National Program of Research against AIDS of the Istituto Superiore di Sanità (Rome, Italy; G.P.) and by National Institutes of Health grant 1-R21-MH075670-01A1 (M.A., F.B., and G.P.).
S.A.M. participated in this study as partial fulfillment of her PhD course in Molecular and Cellular Biology of the Vita-Salute San Raffaele University in Milan and of the Open University of London, United Kingdom. Her PhD course is sustained by a fellowship from the Europrise Network of Excellence funded by the Sixth Framework Programme of the European Commission.
National Institutes of Health
Authorship
Contribution: M.A. designed and performed experiments, analyzed and interpreted the results, and contributed to the drafting of the manuscript; S.A.M. and C.E. performed experiments and interpreted the results; R.P. and F.B. designed experiments and contributed to the interpretation of the results and drafting of the manuscript; and G.P. designed experiments, analyzed and interpreted the results, and contributed to the drafting of the manuscript.
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Correspondence: Massimo Alfano, P2/P3 Laboratories, DIBIT, Via Olgettina n. 58, 20132, Milan, Italy; e-mail: alfano.massimo@hsr.it.