CCR5AS lncRNA variation differentially regulates CCR5, influencing HIV disease outcome.

Kulkarni, Smita, Alexandra Lied, Viraj Kulkarni, Marijana Rucevic, Maureen P Martin, Victoria Walker-Sperling, Stephen K Anderson, et al. 2019. “CCR5AS LncRNA Variation Differentially Regulates CCR5, Influencing HIV Disease Outcome.”. Nature Immunology 20 (7): 824-34.

Abstract

Multiple genome-wide studies have identified associations between outcome of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and polymorphisms in and around the gene encoding the HIV co-receptor CCR5, but the functional basis for the strongest of these associations, rs1015164A/G, is unknown. We found that rs1015164 marks variation in an activating transcription factor 1 binding site that controls expression of the antisense long noncoding RNA (lncRNA) CCR5AS. Knockdown or enhancement of CCR5AS expression resulted in a corresponding change in CCR5 expression on CD4+ T cells. CCR5AS interfered with interactions between the RNA-binding protein Raly and the CCR5 3' untranslated region, protecting CCR5 messenger RNA from Raly-mediated degradation. Reduction in CCR5 expression through inhibition of CCR5AS diminished infection of CD4+ T cells with CCR5-tropic HIV in vitro. These data represent a rare determination of the functional importance of a genome-wide disease association where expression of a lncRNA affects HIV infection and disease progression.

Last updated on 03/27/2023
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