Absence of cGAS-mediated type I IFN responses in HIV-1-infected T cells

  • Carina Elsner
  • , Aparna Ponnurangam
  • , Julia Kazmierski
  • , Thomas Zillinger
  • , Jenny Jansen
  • , Daniel Todt
  • , Katinka Döhner
  • , Shuting Xu
  • , Aurélie Ducroux
  • , Nils Kriedemann
  • , Angelina Malassa
  • , Pia Katharina Larsen
  • , Gunther Hartmann
  • , Winfried Barchet
  • , Eike Steinmann
  • , Ulrich Kalinke
  • , Beate Sodeik
  • , Christine Goffinet

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

26 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The DNA sensor cGAS catalyzes the production of the cyclic dinucleotide cGAMP, resulting in type I interferon responses. We addressed the functionality of cGAS-mediated DNA sensing in human and murine T cells. Activated primary CD4+ T cells expressed cGAS and responded to plasmid DNA by upregulation of ISGs and release of bioactive interferon. In mouse T cells, cGAS KO ablated sensing of plasmid DNA, and TREX1 KO enabled cells to sense short immunostimulatory DNA. Expression of IFIT1 and MX2 was down-regulated and upregulated in cGAS KO and TREX1 KO T cell lines, respectively, compared to parental cells. Despite their intact cGAS sensing pathway, human CD4+ T cells failed to mount a reverse transcriptase (RT) inhibitor-sensitive immune response following HIV-1 infection. In contrast, infection of human T cells with HSV-1 that is functionally deficient for the cGAS antagonist pUL41 (HSV-1ΔUL41N) resulted in a cGAS-dependent type I interferon response. In accordance with our results in primary CD4+ T cells, plasmid challenge or HSV-1ΔUL41N inoculation of T cell lines provoked an entirely cGAS-dependent type I interferon response, including IRF3 phosphorylation and expression of ISGs. In contrast, no RT-dependent interferon response was detected following transduction of T cell lines with VSV-G-pseudotyped lentiviral or gammaretroviral particles. Together, T cells are capable to raise a cGAS-dependent cell-intrinsic response to both plasmid DNA challenge or inoculation with HSV-1ΔUL41N. However, HIV-1 infection does not appear to trigger cGAS-mediated sensing of viral DNA in T cells, possibly by revealing viral DNA of insufficient quantity, length, and/or accessibility to cGAS.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)19475-19486
Number of pages12
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume117
Issue number32
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 11 Aug 2020
Externally publishedYes

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

Keywords

  • CGAS
  • HIV-1
  • HSV-1
  • Innate sensing
  • T cells

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