Wang Zhuying, Pekarskaya Olga, Bencheikh Meryem, Chao Wei, Gelbard Harris A, Ghorpade Anuja, Rothstein Jeffrey D, Volsky David J
Molecular Virology Division, St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center, College of Physicians & Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, NY 10019, USA.
Virology. 2003 Jul 20;312(1):60-73. doi: 10.1016/s0042-6822(03)00181-8.
L-Glutamate is the major excitatory neurotransmitter in the brain. Astrocytes maintain low levels of synaptic glutamate by high-affinity uptake and defects in this function may lead to neuronal cell death by excitotoxicity. We tested the effects of HIV-1 and its envelope glycoprotein gp120 upon glutamate uptake and expression of glutamate transporters EAAT1 and EAAT2 in fetal human astrocytes in vitro. Astrocytes isolated from fetal tissues between 16 and 19 weeks of gestation expressed EAAT1 and EAAT2 RNA and proteins as detected by Northern blot analysis and immunoblotting, respectively, and the cells were capable of specific glutamate uptake. Exposure of astrocytes to HIV-1 or gp120 significantly impaired glutamate uptake by the cells, with maximum inhibition within 6 h, followed by gradual decline during 3 days of observation. HIV-1-infected cells showed a 59% reduction in V(max) for glutamate transport, indicating a reduction in the number of active transporter sites on the cell surface. Impaired glutamate transport after HIV-1 infection or gp120 exposure correlated with a 40-70% decline in steady-state levels of EAAT2 RNA and protein. EAAT1 RNA and protein levels were less affected. Treatment of astrocytes with tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) decreased the expression of both EAAT1 and EAAT2, but neither HIV-1 nor gp120 were found to induce TNF-alpha production by astrocytes. These findings demonstrate that HIV-1 and gp120 induce transcriptional downmodulation of the EAAT2 transporter gene in human astrocytes and coordinately attenuate glutamate transport by the cells. Reduction of the ability of HIV-1-infected astrocytes to take up glutamate may contribute to the development of neurological disease.
L-谷氨酸是大脑中主要的兴奋性神经递质。星形胶质细胞通过高亲和力摄取维持突触谷氨酸的低水平,该功能缺陷可能导致神经元细胞因兴奋性毒性而死亡。我们在体外测试了HIV-1及其包膜糖蛋白gp120对人胎儿星形胶质细胞中谷氨酸摄取以及谷氨酸转运体EAAT1和EAAT2表达的影响。通过Northern印迹分析和免疫印迹分别检测到,从妊娠16至19周的胎儿组织中分离出的星形胶质细胞表达EAAT1和EAAT2 RNA及蛋白质,并且这些细胞能够特异性摄取谷氨酸。将星形胶质细胞暴露于HIV-1或gp120会显著损害细胞的谷氨酸摄取,在6小时内达到最大抑制,随后在3天的观察期内逐渐下降。感染HIV-1的细胞谷氨酸转运的V(max)降低了59%,表明细胞表面活性转运位点的数量减少。HIV-1感染或gp120暴露后谷氨酸转运受损与EAAT2 RNA和蛋白质的稳态水平下降40 - 70%相关。EAAT1 RNA和蛋白质水平受影响较小。用肿瘤坏死因子-α(TNF-α)处理星形胶质细胞会降低EAAT1和EAAT2的表达,但未发现HIV-1和gp120能诱导星形胶质细胞产生TNF-α。这些发现表明,HIV-1和gp120在人星形胶质细胞中诱导EAAT2转运体基因的转录下调,并协同减弱细胞的谷氨酸转运。HIV-1感染的星形胶质细胞摄取谷氨酸能力的降低可能有助于神经疾病的发展。