McCarthy Micheline, Vidaurre Irving, Geffin Rebeca
Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Miami, Florida, USA.
J Neurovirol. 2006 Oct;12(5):333-48. doi: 10.1080/13550280600915347.
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection of the brain is associated with neuronal injury manifested by dendritic pruning, aberrant neurofilament metabolism, and decreased synaptic density. The central nervous system (CNS) responds to neuronal injury by differentiating new neurons and astrocytes from resident populations of multipotent neuroepithelial progenitor cells (NEP) located in regions such as the subventricular zone or hippocampus. In vitro studies have demonstrated that the HIV-1 virion or envelope glycoprotein gp120 can injure differentiated human neurons and astrocytes, suggesting that HIV-1 proteins could similarly injure NEP or NEP-derived glial and neuronal lineage-committed precursor cells. To answer this question, human fetal brain-derived "neurospheres" containing NEP and NEP-derived precursor cells were cultured in low serum differentiation medium containing lymphotropic HIV-1(SF2), macrophage-tropic HIV-1(SF128A), or recombinant gp120SF2 from HIV-1(SF2). These experiments indicate that exposure to HIV-1 does not affect the ability of the NEP to differentiate into cells expressing either astrocyte-specific or neuron-specific cytoskeletal antigens. However prolonged exposure to HIV-1 does selectively decrease expression of neuronal antigens (microtubule beta-III-tubulin and intermediate filament neurofilament-L) but not astrocyte antigens (intermediate filament glial fibrillary acidic protein). The effects of continuous exposure to HIV-1 or gp120 may result from injury to developing neurons and/or impairment of the neuronal developmental process itself. By depressing neuronal microtubule and neurofilament protein expression, HIV-1 and gp120 exposure compromise the potential for postmitotic neuronal dendrite and axon development.
1型人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV-1)感染大脑与神经元损伤有关,表现为树突修剪、异常神经丝代谢和突触密度降低。中枢神经系统(CNS)通过从位于脑室下区或海马体等区域的多能神经上皮祖细胞(NEP)的常驻群体中分化出新的神经元和星形胶质细胞来应对神经元损伤。体外研究表明,HIV-1病毒体或包膜糖蛋白gp120可损伤分化的人类神经元和星形胶质细胞,这表明HIV-1蛋白可能同样损伤NEP或NEP衍生的神经胶质和神经元谱系定向前体细胞。为了回答这个问题,将含有NEP和NEP衍生前体细胞的人胎脑来源的“神经球”培养在含有嗜淋巴细胞HIV-1(SF2)、嗜巨噬细胞HIV-1(SF128A)或来自HIV-1(SF2)的重组gp120SF2的低血清分化培养基中。这些实验表明,暴露于HIV-1不会影响NEP分化为表达星形胶质细胞特异性或神经元特异性细胞骨架抗原的细胞的能力。然而,长时间暴露于HIV-1确实会选择性地降低神经元抗原(微管β-III-微管蛋白和中间丝神经丝-L)的表达,但不会降低星形胶质细胞抗原(中间丝胶质纤维酸性蛋白)的表达。持续暴露于HIV-1或gp120的影响可能是由于对发育中的神经元的损伤和/或神经元发育过程本身的损害。通过抑制神经元微管和神经丝蛋白的表达,HIV-1和gp120暴露会损害有丝分裂后神经元树突和轴突发育的潜力。