Malik Shaily, Theis Martin, Eugenin Eliseo A
Public Health Research Institute (PHRI), Newark, NJ, United States.
Department of Microbiology, Biochemistry, and Molecular Genetics, Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Newark, NJ, United States.
Front Mol Neurosci. 2017 Dec 5;10:404. doi: 10.3389/fnmol.2017.00404. eCollection 2017.
Human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) infection compromises the central nervous system (CNS) in a significant number of infected individuals, resulting in neurological dysfunction that ranges from minor cognitive deficits to frank dementia. While macrophages/microglia are the predominant CNS cells infected by HIV, our laboratory and others have shown that HIV-infected astrocytes, although present in relatively low numbers with minimal to undetectable viral replication, play key role in NeuroAIDS pathogenesis. Our laboratory has identified that HIV "hijacks" connexin (Cx) containing channels, such as gap junctions (GJs) and hemichannels (HCs), to spread toxicity and apoptosis to uninfected cells even in the absence of active viral replication. In this study, using a murine model with an astrocyte-directed deletion of Cx43 gene (hGFAP-cre Cx43) and control Cx43 mice, we examined whether few HIV-infected human astrocytoma cells (U87-CD4-CCR5), microinjected into the mouse cortex, can spread toxicity and apoptosis through GJ-mediated mechanisms, into the mouse cells, which are resistant to HIV infection. In the control Cx43 mice, microinjection of HIV-infected U87-CD4-CCR5 cells led to apoptosis in 84.28 ± 6.38% of mouse brain cells around the site of microinjection, whereas hGFAP-cre Cx43 mice exhibited minimal apoptosis (2.78 ± 1.55%). However, simultaneous injection of GJ blocker, 18α-glycyrrhetinic acid, and Cx43 blocking peptide along with microinjection of HIV-infected cells prevented apoptosis in Cx43 mice, demonstrating the Cx43 is essential for HIV-induced bystander toxicity. In conclusion, our findings demonstrate that Cx43 expression, and formation of GJs is essential for bystander apoptosis during HIV infection. These findings reveal novel potential therapeutic targets to reduce astrocyte-mediated bystander toxicity in HIV-infected individuals because despite low to undetectable viral replication in the CNS, Cx channels hijacked by HIV amplify viral neuropathogenesis.
人类免疫缺陷病毒1型(HIV-1)感染会使大量感染者的中枢神经系统(CNS)受损,导致从轻微认知缺陷到明显痴呆的神经功能障碍。虽然巨噬细胞/小胶质细胞是受HIV感染的主要中枢神经系统细胞,但我们实验室及其他研究表明,受HIV感染的星形胶质细胞尽管数量相对较少且病毒复制极少甚至无法检测到,但在神经艾滋病发病机制中起关键作用。我们实验室已确定,HIV会“劫持”含连接蛋白(Cx)的通道,如缝隙连接(GJs)和半通道(HCs),即使在无活跃病毒复制的情况下,也能将毒性和凋亡扩散至未感染细胞。在本研究中,我们使用一种星形胶质细胞定向缺失Cx43基因的小鼠模型(hGFAP-cre Cx43)和对照Cx43小鼠,研究了微量注射到小鼠皮层的少量受HIV感染的人星形细胞瘤细胞(U87-CD4-CCR5)是否能通过GJ介导的机制将毒性和凋亡扩散到对HIV感染有抗性的小鼠细胞中。在对照Cx43小鼠中,微量注射受HIV感染的U87-CD4-CCR5细胞导致微量注射部位周围84.28±6.38%的小鼠脑细胞发生凋亡,而hGFAP-cre Cx43小鼠的凋亡极少(2.78±1.55%)。然而,在微量注射受HIV感染细胞的同时注射GJ阻滞剂18α-甘草次酸和Cx43阻断肽可防止Cx43小鼠发生凋亡,表明Cx43对HIV诱导的旁观者毒性至关重要。总之,我们的研究结果表明,Cx43的表达以及GJs的形成对于HIV感染期间的旁观者凋亡至关重要。这些发现揭示了新的潜在治疗靶点,以降低HIV感染者中星形胶质细胞介导的旁观者毒性,因为尽管中枢神经系统中的病毒复制水平较低甚至无法检测到,但被HIV劫持的Cx通道会放大病毒神经发病机制。