Department of Pharmacology and Physiology, Drexel University College of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, 19102, USA.
Department of Pathology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY, 10461, USA.
J Neuroimmune Pharmacol. 2020 Dec;15(4):729-742. doi: 10.1007/s11481-020-09927-6. Epub 2020 Jun 6.
Antiretroviral therapy (ART) has transformed HIV into a chronic condition, lengthening and improving the lives of individuals living with this virus. Despite successful suppression of HIV replication, people living with HIV (PLWH) are susceptible to a growing number of comorbidities, including neuroHIV that results from infection of the central nervous system (CNS). Alterations in the dopaminergic system have long been associated with HIV infection of the CNS. Studies indicate that changes in dopamine concentrations not only alter neurotransmission, but also significantly impact the function of immune cells, contributing to neuroinflammation and neuronal dysfunction. Monocytes/macrophages, which are a major target for HIV in the CNS, are responsive to dopamine. Therefore, defining more precisely the mechanisms by which dopamine acts on these cells, and the changes in cellular function elicited by this neurotransmitter are necessary to develop therapeutic strategies to treat neuroHIV. This is especially important for vulnerable populations of PLWH with chemically altered dopamine concentrations, such as individuals with substance use disorder (SUD), or aging individuals using dopamine-altering medications. The specific neuropathologic and neurocognitive consequences of increased CNS dopamine remain unclear. This is due to the complex nature of HIV neuropathogenesis, and logistical and technical challenges that contribute to inconsistencies among cohort studies, animal models and in vitro studies, as well as lack of demographic data and access to human CNS samples and cells. This review summarizes current understanding of the impact of dopamine on HIV neuropathogenesis, and proposes new experimental approaches to examine the role of dopamine in CNS HIV infection. Graphical abstract HIV Neuropathogenesis in the Presence of a Disrupted Dopamine System. Both substance abuse disorders and the use of dopaminergic medications for age-related diseases are associated with changes in CNS dopamine concentrations and dopaminergic neurotransmission. These changes can lead to aberrant immune function, particularly in myeloid cells, which contributes to the neuroinflammation, neuropathology and dysfunctional neurotransmission observed in dopamine-rich regions in HIV+ individuals. These changes, which are seen despite the use antiretroviral therapy (ART), in turn lead to further dysregulation of the dopamine system. Thus, in individuals with elevated dopamine, the bi-directional interaction between aberrant dopaminergic neurotransmission and HIV infection creates a feedback loop contributing to HIV associated neurocognitive dysfunction and neuroHIV. However, the distinct contributions and interactions made by HIV infection, inflammatory mediators, ART, drugs of abuse, and age-related therapeutics are poorly understood. Defining more precisely the mechanisms by which these factors influence the development of neurological disease is critical to addressing the continued presence of neuroHIV in vulnerable populations, such as HIV-infected older adults or drug abusers. Due to the complexity of this system, understanding these effects will require a combination of novel experimental modalities in the context of ART. These will include more rigorous epidemiological studies, relevant animal models, and in vitro cellular and molecular mechanistic analysis.
抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)将 HIV 转变为一种慢性疾病,延长了携带该病毒的个体的寿命并改善了他们的生活。尽管 HIV 复制得到了成功抑制,但 HIV 感染者(PLWH)仍易患越来越多的合并症,包括源自中枢神经系统(CNS)感染的神经 HIV。多巴胺能系统的改变与 HIV 对 CNS 的感染早已相关。研究表明,多巴胺浓度的变化不仅改变了神经递质的传递,还显著影响免疫细胞的功能,导致神经炎症和神经元功能障碍。单核细胞/巨噬细胞是 HIV 在 CNS 中的主要靶标,对多巴胺有反应。因此,更精确地定义多巴胺作用于这些细胞的机制,以及这种神经递质引起的细胞功能变化,对于开发治疗神经 HIV 的治疗策略是必要的。对于具有化学改变的多巴胺浓度的 HIV 感染者(如患有物质使用障碍(SUD)的个体或使用改变多巴胺的药物的老年个体)等易受影响的人群来说,这一点尤为重要。中枢神经系统多巴胺增加的具体神经病理学和神经认知后果仍不清楚。这是由于 HIV 神经发病机制的复杂性,以及导致队列研究、动物模型和体外研究之间不一致以及缺乏人口统计学数据和对人类中枢神经系统样本和细胞的访问的逻辑和技术挑战所致。这篇综述总结了目前对多巴胺对 HIV 神经发病机制影响的认识,并提出了新的实验方法来研究多巴胺在中枢神经系统 HIV 感染中的作用。
存在破坏的多巴胺系统的 HIV 神经发病机制。物质滥用障碍和使用多巴胺能药物治疗与年龄相关的疾病都与中枢神经系统多巴胺浓度和多巴胺能神经传递的改变有关。这些变化会导致异常的免疫功能,特别是在髓样细胞中,这会导致在 HIV 阳性个体的多巴胺丰富区域观察到的神经炎症、神经病理学和功能障碍性神经传递。尽管使用了抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART),这些变化仍会导致多巴胺系统进一步失调。因此,在多巴胺升高的个体中,异常的多巴胺能神经传递与 HIV 感染之间的双向相互作用会产生一个反馈回路,导致与 HIV 相关的认知功能障碍和神经 HIV。然而,HIV 感染、炎症介质、ART、滥用药物和与年龄相关的治疗药物的不同贡献和相互作用还知之甚少。更精确地定义这些因素影响神经系统疾病发展的机制对于解决脆弱人群中持续存在的神经 HIV 问题至关重要,例如感染 HIV 的老年人或药物滥用者。由于该系统的复杂性,理解这些影响需要在 ART 背景下结合新的实验模式。这些将包括更严格的流行病学研究、相关的动物模型以及体外细胞和分子机制分析。