Unraveling cervical inflammation in HIV-infected women: The regulatory role of miR-204-5p and miR-3691-3p.

Journal: Life Sciences
Published:
Abstract

Genital inflammation not only increases the risk of HIV acquisition, reduces antiretroviral efficacy, but also poses risks for other STIs, highlighting the need to understand underlying regulatory mechanisms. MicroRNAs/miRNAs are important regulators of various cellular processes, including inflammation; however their role in HIV-driven cervical inflammation remains unclear. Using transcriptome analysis and various bioinformatics tools, we identified key inflammation-associated miRNAs, molecular pathways and regulatory networks in the cervical cells of 24 HIV-infected women vis-a-vis 23 HIV-uninfected women. RNA-sequencing deciphered a dysregulated profile of 8 inflammation-associated miRNAs in cervical cells of HIV-infected women. In line with RNA-sequencing data, RT-PCR confirmed the upregulated expression of hsa-miR-204-5p and hsa-miR-3691-3p along with inflammatory markers (IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α, NF-kB) in cervical cells of HIV-infected women. KEGG analysis revealed involvement of these miRNAs in inflammatory pathways (MAPK, Wnt, PI3K-AKT) and cancer-related pathways. PPI network identified CTNNB1, BCL2, and GSK3B as key hub genes, where GSK3B showed maximum interactions with transcription factors (TF; n = 31). EZH2 and EED were prominent TFs showing highest interactions with hub genes. Drug prediction further suggested Valproic acid, a known GSK3B inhibitor, as a potential therapeutic based on degree of interaction with hub genes. Conclusively, HIV-infected women displayed cervical inflammation, increased miR-204-5p and miR-3691-3p and deregulated inflammatory pathways. Targeting these miRNAs and/or their intermediates might be one of the useful approaches to alleviate cervical inflammation in HIV-infected women, which needs to be examined further.

Authors
Kadambari Akolkar, Sudipta Sonar, Amrita Rao, Megha Mamulwar, Ujjwala Ghule, Rajani Bagul, Pallavi Vidhate, Aditi Bedekar, Himadri Bal, Arati Mane, Madhuri Thakar, Vandana Saxena
Relevant Conditions

HIV/AIDS