White Matter Abnormalities Linked to Interferon, Stress Response, and Energy Metabolism Gene Expression Changes in Older HIV-Positive Patients on Antiretroviral Therapy.
Isaac H SolomonSukrutha ChettimadaVikas MisraDavid R LorenzRobert J GorelickBenjamin B GelmanSusan MorgelloDana GabuzdaPublished in: Molecular neurobiology (2019)
Neurocognitive impairment (NCI) remains a significant cause of morbidity in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive individuals despite highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART). White matter abnormalities have emerged as a key component of age-related neurodegeneration, and accumulating evidence suggests they play a role in HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders. Viral persistence in the brain induces chronic inflammation associated with lymphocytic infiltration, microglial proliferation, myelin loss, and cerebrovascular lesions. In this study, gene expression profiling was performed on frontal white matter from 34 older HIV+ individuals on HAART (18 with NCI) and 24 HIV-negative controls. We used the NanoString nCounter platform to evaluate 933 probes targeting inflammation, interferon and stress responses, energy metabolism, and central nervous system-related genes. Viral loads were measured using single-copy assays. Compared to HIV- controls, HIV+ individuals exhibited increased expression of genes related to interferon, MHC-1, and stress responses, myeloid cells, and T cells and decreased expression of genes associated with oligodendrocytes and energy metabolism in white matter. These findings correlated with increased white matter inflammation and myelin pallor, suggesting interferon (IRFs, IFITM1, ISG15, MX1, OAS3) and stress response (ATF4, XBP1, CHOP, CASP1, WARS) gene expression changes are associated with decreased energy metabolism (SREBF1, SREBF2, PARK2, TXNIP) and oligodendrocyte myelin production (MAG, MOG), leading to white matter dysfunction. Machine learning identified a 15-gene signature predictive of HIV status that was validated in an independent cohort. No specific gene expression patterns were associated with NCI. These findings suggest therapies that decrease chronic inflammation while protecting mitochondrial function may help to preserve white matter integrity in older HIV+ individuals.
Keyphrases
- white matter
- antiretroviral therapy
- hiv positive
- human immunodeficiency virus
- hiv infected
- hiv infected patients
- gene expression
- hiv aids
- men who have sex with men
- multiple sclerosis
- south africa
- oxidative stress
- hiv testing
- machine learning
- dendritic cells
- poor prognosis
- genome wide
- hepatitis c virus
- high throughput
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- physical activity
- newly diagnosed
- bipolar disorder
- small molecule
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- sars cov
- resting state
- spinal cord injury
- drug delivery
- bioinformatics analysis