Cedeno-Laurent Filiberto, Bryant Joseph, Fishelevich Rita, Jones Odell D, Deng April, Eng Maria L, Gaspari Anthony A, Trujillo J Roberto
Division of Basic Science, Institute of Human Virology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21201, USA.
J Dermatol Sci. 2009 Feb;53(2):112-9. doi: 10.1016/j.jdermsci.2008.08.015. Epub 2008 Nov 11.
Skin lesions commonly affect AIDS patients. The pathogenesis of certain dermatologic disorders primarily associated to HIV-1 is unclear, and better forms of therapy for these conditions need to be discovered. Transgenic animal models represent a novel approach for the study of these disorders and for the quest of more effective forms of treatment.
Characterize this HIV-1 transgenic rat as a model to study skin diseases related to HIV/AIDS.
A transgenic rat was developed, using an HIV-1 construct with deleted gag and pol genes. Morphological and genotypical evaluations were followed by cytokine profile characterization of the lesions.
We report the characterization of a colony of HIV-1 transgenic rats that developed skin lesions in a frequency of 22.5%. Cutaneous expression of functional HIV-1 transgenes correlated precisely with the severity of the phenotype. In early stages, rats manifested localized areas of xerosis and dispersed papulosquamous lesions. These hyperplastic manifestations were observed in conjunction with an increased epidermal expression of tat protein and a Th1/Th2 profile of cytokines. As the lesions progressed, they formed inflammatory plaques that subsequently ulcerated. Histologically, these lesions displayed a profound lymphocytic infiltrate, epidermal necrosis, and a marked increase of both Th1 and Th2 derived cytokines. Moreover, the presence of circulating IgG antibodies against HIV-1 gp120 was detected.
This animal model as other HIV-1 transgenic mice described in the past, is not able to fully explain the myriad of skin findings that can occur in HIV-infected humans; however, it represents a potential animal model system for the study of immune-mediated inflammatory skin diseases.
皮肤病变在艾滋病患者中很常见。某些主要与HIV-1相关的皮肤病的发病机制尚不清楚,需要发现针对这些病症的更好治疗方法。转基因动物模型是研究这些疾病和寻求更有效治疗形式的一种新方法。
将这种HIV-1转基因大鼠表征为研究与HIV/AIDS相关皮肤病的模型。
利用缺失gag和pol基因的HIV-1构建体培育出一只转基因大鼠。在进行形态学和基因型评估后,对病变进行细胞因子谱表征。
我们报告了一群HIV-1转基因大鼠的表征,其皮肤病变发生率为22.5%。功能性HIV-1转基因的皮肤表达与表型严重程度精确相关。在早期阶段,大鼠表现出局部皮肤干燥区域和散在的丘疹鳞屑性病变。这些增生性表现伴随着tat蛋白表皮表达增加和细胞因子的Th1/Th2谱。随着病变进展,形成炎症斑块,随后溃疡。组织学上,这些病变显示出大量淋巴细胞浸润、表皮坏死以及Th1和Th2衍生细胞因子均显著增加。此外,检测到针对HIV-1 gp120的循环IgG抗体。
与过去描述的其他HIV-1转基因小鼠一样,这种动物模型无法完全解释HIV感染人类中可能出现的众多皮肤表现;然而,它代表了一种用于研究免疫介导的炎症性皮肤病的潜在动物模型系统。