Venneti Sriram, Bonneh-Barkay Dafna, Lopresti Brian J, Bissel Stephanie J, Wang Guoji, Mathis Chester A, Piatak Michael, Lifson Jeffrey D, Nyaundi Julia O, Murphey-Corb Michael, Wiley Clayton A
Department of Pathology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213, USA.
Am J Pathol. 2008 Jun;172(6):1603-16. doi: 10.2353/ajpath.2008.070967. Epub 2008 May 8.
Human immunodeficiency virus encephalitis is characterized by infiltration of the brain with infected and activated macrophages; however, it is not known why disease occurs after variable lengths of infection in 25% of immunosuppressed acquired immune deficiency syndrome patients. We determined in vivo correlates (in peripheral blood and the central nervous system) for the development and progression of lentiviral encephalitis by longitudinally following infected and activated macrophages in the brain using positron emission tomography (PET). Using human postmortem brain tissues from both lentivirus-infected encephalitic patients and cell culture systems, we showed that the PET ligand (3)H-PK11195 bound specifically to virus-infected and activated macrophages. We longitudinally imaged infected and activated brain macrophages in a cohort of macaques infected with simian immunodeficiency virus using (11)C-PK11195. (11)C-PK11195 retention in vivo in the brain correlated with viral burden in the brain and cerebrospinal fluid, and with regions of both presynaptic and postsynaptic damage. Finally, longitudinal changes in (11)C-PK11195 retention in the brain in vivo correlated with changes in circulating monocytes as well as in both natural killer and memory CD4(+) T cells in the periphery. Our results suggest that development and progression of simian immunodeficiency virus encephalitis in vivo correlates with changes in specific cell subtypes in the periphery. A combination of PET imaging and the assessment of these peripheral immune parameters may facilitate longitudinal assessment of lentiviral encephalitis in living patients as well as evaluation of therapeutic efficacies.
人类免疫缺陷病毒脑炎的特征是受感染并被激活的巨噬细胞浸润大脑;然而,在25%的免疫抑制的获得性免疫缺陷综合征患者中,感染不同时长后为何会发病尚不清楚。我们通过正电子发射断层扫描(PET)对大脑中受感染并被激活的巨噬细胞进行纵向追踪,确定了慢病毒脑炎发生和发展在体内的相关因素(在外周血和中枢神经系统中)。利用慢病毒感染的脑炎患者的人类尸检脑组织以及细胞培养系统,我们发现PET配体(3)H-PK11195能特异性结合病毒感染并被激活的巨噬细胞。我们使用(11)C-PK11195对一群感染了猴免疫缺陷病毒的猕猴大脑中受感染并被激活的巨噬细胞进行纵向成像。(11)C-PK11195在大脑中的体内滞留与大脑和脑脊液中的病毒载量以及突触前和突触后损伤区域相关。最后,(11)C-PK11195在大脑中的体内滞留的纵向变化与外周循环单核细胞以及自然杀伤细胞和记忆性CD4(+)T细胞的变化相关。我们的结果表明,体内猴免疫缺陷病毒脑炎的发生和发展与外周特定细胞亚型的变化相关。PET成像与这些外周免疫参数评估相结合,可能有助于对活体患者的慢病毒脑炎进行纵向评估以及治疗效果评估。