Induction of Heme Oxygenase-1 Deficiency and Associated Glutamate-Mediated Neurotoxicity Is a Highly Conserved HIV Phenotype of Chronic Macrophage Infection That Is Resistant to Antiretroviral Therapy.
Alexander J GillColleen E KovacsicsPatricia J VanceRonald G CollmanDennis L KolsonPublished in: Journal of virology (2015)
The continued prevalence of HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND) underscores the need for adjunctive therapy that targets the neuropathological processes that persist in antiretroviral therapy (ART)-treated HIV-infected individuals. To this end, we previously identified one such possible process, a deficiency of the antioxidative and anti-inflammatory enzyme heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) in the brains of individuals with HAND. In the present study, our findings suggest that the HO-1 deficiency associated with excess glutamate production and neurotoxicity in HIV-infected macrophages is a highly conserved phenotype of macrophage-tropic HIV strains and that this phenotype can persist in the macrophage compartment in the presence of ART. This suggests a plausible mechanism by which HIV infection of brain macrophages in ART-treated individuals could exacerbate oxidative stress and glutamate-induced neuronal injury, each of which is associated with neurocognitive dysfunction in infected individuals. Thus, therapies that rescue the HO-1 deficiency in HIV-infected individuals could provide additional neuroprotection to ART.
Keyphrases
- antiretroviral therapy
- hiv infected
- human immunodeficiency virus
- hiv positive
- hiv infected patients
- hiv aids
- oxidative stress
- anti inflammatory
- replacement therapy
- adipose tissue
- bipolar disorder
- escherichia coli
- risk factors
- multiple sclerosis
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- dna damage
- pi k akt
- stem cells
- drug induced
- cell proliferation
- mesenchymal stem cells
- signaling pathway
- bone marrow
- endothelial cells
- men who have sex with men
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- high glucose
- hiv testing