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<biogps><data><item key="owner">ArrayExpress Uploader</item><item key="pop_total">0</item><item key="species">human</item><item key="factors"><item><item key="GSM1037251 1"/></item><item><item key="GSM1037250 1"/></item><item><item key="GSM1037249 1"/></item><item><item key="GSM1037248 1"/></item></item><item key="id">2553</item><item key="ownerprofile_id">arrayexpress_sid</item><item key="platform">4</item><item key="summary_wrapped">HIV-1 infections of women are mainly acquired through female reproductive tract where cervical and vaginal epithelial cells are the first...</item><item key="geo_gse_id">E-GEOD-42291</item><item key="owner_profile">/profile/8773/arrayexpressuploader</item><item key="factor_count">0</item><item key="sample_count">4</item><item key="tags"><item>axis</item><item>cell</item><item>epithelial cell</item><item>genome</item><item>lamina propria</item><item>line</item><item>tract</item></item><item key="lastmodified">Dec.12, 2014</item><item key="is_default">False</item><item key="geo_gds_id"/><item key="slug">transcriptional-analysis-of-cervical-epithelial-ce</item><item key="geo_id_plat">E-GEOD-42291_A-AFFY-44</item><item key="name">Transcriptional analysis of cervical epithelial cell responses to HIV-1</item><item key="created">Jul.12, 2014</item><item key="summary">HIV-1 infections of women are mainly acquired through female reproductive tract where cervical and vaginal epithelial cells are the first line of defense. Although HIV-1 does not directly infect epithelial cells, HIV-1 obligatorily interacts with and crosses over epithelial layer to infect susceptible target cells, mainly CD4+ T cells, in the lamina propria to initiate an infection. However, the mechanism and ramification of the interaction of HIV-1 and epithelial cells in vaginal transmission of HIV-1 remain to be elucidated. We hypothesized that cervical epithelial cells are not a passive barrier, but actively respond to HIV-1 to change  mucosal milieu and facilitate HIV-1 transmission. We tested this hypothesis by studying the responses of cervical epithelial cells to HIV-1 through profiling genome-wide transcription. We found 1) cervical epithelial cells actively respond to HIV-1. Five hundred forty-three transcripts/genes in cervical epithelial cells were significantly altered in expression at four hours post exposure to HIV-1, of which many relate to important signaling pathways, such as innate immune responses, pattern recognition receptors, apoptosis, biosynthesis, and energy production, 2) HIV-1 increases the expression of CXC Chemokines (IL-8, CXCL1 and CXCL3) in cervical epithelial cells. IL-8 and CXCL1 are potent chemotactic for multinuclear neutrophils (MNP), monocytes and a minority of lymphocytes, and CXCL3 is predominant chemotactic for monocytes, 3) HIV-1 increases the expression of key inflammatory enzymes-COX-1 and COX-2.  COX-1 is responsible for the production of prostaglandins that are important for homeostatic functions, and COX-2 is a key enzyme to convert arachidonic acid to prostaglandins, key inflammatory mediators, and 4) the increased expression of IL-8 and COX-2 revealed using microarray analysis was mapped into the endocervical epithelial cells of macaques inoculated with inactivated SIV in vivo. Our date lead to a role model of epithelial cells in HIV-1 vaginal transmission, that is the axis of HIV-1, epithelial cells, proinflammatory molecules (IL-8, CXCL1, CXCL3, COX-1 and COX-2), cell recruitment (MNP, monocytes and T cells), and inflammation. This model implies that moderating epithelial proinflammatory response to HIV-1 may be utilized in prevention of HIV vaginal transmission. Human endocervical epithelial cell line, CRL-2615, was inoculated with HIV-1 ME1 and collected 4hrs post exposure. Biologically duplicated mRNAs were prepared after exposure.</item><item key="source">http://www.ebi.ac.uk/arrayexpress/experiments/E-GEOD-42291</item><item key="sample_source">http://www.ebi.ac.uk/arrayexpress/experiments/E-GEOD-42291/samples/</item></data></biogps>
