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Interplay between Selenium,Selenoproteins and HIV-1 Replication in Human CD4 T-Lymphocytes
Authors:Olivia M Guillin  Caroline Vindry  Thophile Ohlmann  Laurent Chavatte
Affiliation:1.Centre International de Recherche en Infectiologie (CIRI), 69007 Lyon, France; (O.M.G.); (C.V.);2.Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM) Unité U1111, 69007 Lyon, France;3.Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon (ENS), 69007 Lyon, France;4.Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 (UCBL1), 69622 Lyon, France;5.Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Unité Mixte de Recherche 5308 (UMR5308), 69007 Lyon, France
Abstract:The infection of CD4 T-lymphocytes with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the etiological agent of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), disrupts cellular homeostasis, increases oxidative stress and interferes with micronutrient metabolism. Viral replication simultaneously increases the demand for micronutrients and causes their loss, as for selenium (Se). In HIV-infected patients, selenium deficiency was associated with a lower CD4 T-cell count and a shorter life expectancy. Selenium has an important role in antioxidant defense, redox signaling and redox homeostasis, and most of these biological activities are mediated by its incorporation in an essential family of redox enzymes, namely the selenoproteins. Here, we have investigated how selenium and selenoproteins interplay with HIV infection in different cellular models of human CD4 T lymphocytes derived from established cell lines (Jurkat and SupT1) and isolated primary CD4 T cells. First, we characterized the expression of the selenoproteome in various human T-cell models and found it tightly regulated by the selenium level of the culture media, which was in agreement with reports from non-immune cells. Then, we showed that selenium had no significant effect on HIV-1 protein production nor on infectivity, but slightly reduced the percentage of infected cells in a Jurkat cell line and isolated primary CD4 T cells. Finally, in response to HIV-1 infection, the selenoproteome was slightly altered.
Keywords:selenoproteome  HIV-1  viral infection  glutathione peroxidase  thioredoxin reductase  SELENOS  SELENOO  primary T cells  Jurkat  SupT1  translational control
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