Abstract

HIV infection disturbs the central nervous system (CNS) through inflammation and glial activation. Evidence suggests roles for microRNA (miRNA) in host defense and neuronal homeostasis, though little is known about miRNAs' role in HIV CNS infection. MiRNAs are non-coding RNAs that regulate gene translation through post-transcriptional mechanisms. Messenger-RNA profiling alone is insufficient to elucidate the dynamic dance of molecular expression of the genome. We sought to clarify RNA alterations in the frontal cortex (FC) of HIV-infected individuals and those concurrently infected and diagnosed with major depressive disorder (MDD). This report is the first published study of large-scale miRNA profiling from human HIV-infected FC. The goals of this study were to: 1. Identify changes in miRNA expression that occurred in the frontal cortex (FC) of HIV individuals, 2. Determine whether miRNA expression profiles of the FC could differentiate HIV from HIV/MDD, and 3. Adapt a method to meaningfully integrate gene expression data and miRNA expression data in clinical samples. We isolated RNA from the FC (n = 3) of three separate groups (uninfected controls, HIV, and HIV/MDD) and then pooled the RNA within each group for use in large-scale miRNA profiling. RNA from HIV and HIV/MDD patients (n = 4 per group) were also used for non-pooled mRNA analysis on Affymetrix U133 Plus 2.0 arrays. We then utilized a method for integrating the two datasets in a Target Bias Analysis. We found miRNAs of three types: A) Those with many dysregulated mRNA targets of less stringent statistical significance, B) Fewer dysregulated target-genes of highly stringent statistical significance, and C) unclear bias. In HIV/MDD, more miRNAs were downregulated than in HIV alone. Specific miRNA families at targeted chromosomal loci were dysregulated. The dysregulated miRNAs clustered on Chromosomes 14, 17, 19, and X. A small subset of dysregulated genes had many 3′ untranslated region (3′UTR) target-sites for dysregulated miRNAs. We provide evidence that certain miRNAs serve as key elements in gene regulatory networks in HIV-infected FC and may be implicated in neurobehavioral disorder. Finally, our data indicates that some genes may serve as hubs of miRNA activity.

Highlights

  • RNA may be the most ancient form of biological phenomena, with functions stretching from templating DNA [1] to enzymatic self-regulation [2]

  • They function in association with the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC) to hybridize to 8-mer ‘‘seed’’ sequences in the 39 untranslated regions (39UTR) of target mRNAs [7]

  • We found that a subset of miRNAs were dysregulated, generally downregulated, in the frontal cortex (FC) of patients grouped by psychiatric diagnosis, (HIV/Major depressive disorder (MDD) compared to HIV alone)

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Summary

Introduction

RNA may be the most ancient form of biological phenomena, with functions stretching from templating DNA [1] to enzymatic self-regulation [2]. But functionally robust, RNA species known as microRNA has proved to be at the center of regulating genomic expression. MiRNAs can be transcribed from non-protein-coding genomic regions or intronic regions of ‘‘host’’ genes, with which they are usually co-expressed [4]. After being exported to the cytoplasm they are further processed by Dicer enzyme into mature miRNAs usually of 21–23 nucleotides in length [6]. They function in association with the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC) to hybridize to 8-mer ‘‘seed’’ sequences in the 39 untranslated regions (39UTR) of target mRNAs [7].

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