Methylation profiling

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DNA methylation profiling of colonic epithelium from chronically SIV infected rhesus macaques


ABSTRACT: HIV and pathogenic SIV infection are characterized by gastrointestinal mucosal damage and immune dysfunction that is not reversed by combination anti-retroviral therapy (cART). Increasing evidence points to the contribution of aberrant epigenetic changes to the pathogenesis of gastrointestinal diseases. Nevertheless, the role of epigenetic mechanisms in HIV/SIV-induced gastrointestinal mucosal dysfunction remains understudied. Using reduced-representation bisulfite sequencing, we identified HIV/SIV infection in combination anti-retroviral therapy (cART)-naive rhesus macaques (RMs) to induce marked hypomethylation throughout promoter-associated CpG islands (paCGIs) in genes related to inflammatory response (NLRP6, cGAS), cellular adhesion and proliferation in colonic epithelial cells (CEs). Moreover, low-dose delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) administration reduced NLRP6 protein expression in CE by hypermethylating the NLRP6 paCGI and blocked polyI:C induced NLRP6 upregulation in vitro. In cART suppressed SIV-infected RMs, NLRP6 protein upregulation associated with significantly increased expression of necroptosis-driving proteins; phosphorylated-RIPK3(Ser199), phosphorylated-MLKL(Thr357/Ser358), and HMGB1. Most strikingly, supplementing cART with THC effectively reduced NLRP6 and necroptosis-driving protein expression to pre-infection levels. These findings for the first time demonstrate that NLRP6 upregulation and ensuing activation of necroptosis promote HIV/SIV-induced gastrointestinal mucosal dysfunction and that epigenetic modulation using phytocannabinoids represents a feasible therapeutic modality for alleviating HIV/SIV-induced gastrointestinal inflammation and associated comorbidities.

ORGANISM(S): Macaca mulatta

PROVIDER: GSE289822 | GEO | 2025/04/30

REPOSITORIES: GEO

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