Vélez-López Omar, Carrasquillo-Carrión Kelvin, Cantres-Rosario Yadira M, Machín-Martínez Eraysy, Álvarez-Ríos Manuel E, Roche-Lima Abiel, Tosado-Rodríguez Eduardo L, Meléndez Loyda M
Department of Microbiology and Medical Zoology, University of Puerto Rico, Medical Sciences Campus, San Juan, PR 00936, USA.
Integrated Informatics, Center for Collaborative Research in Health Disparities, University of Puerto Rico, Medical Sciences Campus, San Juan, PR 00934, USA.
Biomedicines. 2024 Aug 23;12(9):1934. doi: 10.3390/biomedicines12091934.
HIV-1 infects monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM) that migrate into the brain and secrete virus and neurotoxic molecules, including cathepsin B (CATB), causing cognitive dysfunction. Cocaine potentiates CATB secretion and neurotoxicity in HIV-infected MDM. Pretreatment with BD1047, a sigma-1 receptor antagonist, before cocaine exposure reduces HIV-1, CATB secretion, and neuronal apoptosis. We aimed to elucidate the intracellular pathways modulated by BD1047 in HIV-infected MDM exposed to cocaine. We hypothesized that the Sig1R antagonist BD1047, prior to cocaine, significantly deregulates proteins and pathways involved in HIV-1 replication and CATB secretion that lead to neurotoxicity. MDM culture lysates from HIV-1-infected women treated with BD1047 before cocaine were compared with untreated controls using TMT quantitative proteomics, bioinformatics, Lima statistics, and pathway analyses. Results demonstrate that pretreatment with BD1047 before cocaine dysregulated eighty (80) proteins when compared with the infected cocaine group. We found fifteen (15) proteins related to HIV-1 infection, CATB, and mitochondrial function. Upregulated proteins were related to oxidative phosphorylation (SLC25A-31), mitochondria (ATP5PD), ion transport (VDAC2-3), endoplasmic reticulum transport (PHB, TMED10, CANX), and cytoskeleton remodeling (TUB1A-C, ANXA1). BD1047 treatment protects HIV-1-infected MDM exposed to cocaine by upregulating proteins that reduce mitochondrial damage, ER transport, and exocytosis associated with CATB-induced neurotoxicity.
HIV-1感染单核细胞衍生的巨噬细胞(MDM),这些巨噬细胞迁移至大脑并分泌病毒和神经毒性分子,包括组织蛋白酶B(CATB),从而导致认知功能障碍。可卡因可增强HIV感染的MDM中CATB的分泌和神经毒性。在接触可卡因之前,用西格玛-1受体拮抗剂BD1047进行预处理可减少HIV-1、CATB分泌和神经元凋亡。我们旨在阐明BD1047在接触可卡因的HIV感染的MDM中调节的细胞内途径。我们假设,在接触可卡因之前,西格玛-1受体拮抗剂BD1047会显著失调参与HIV-1复制和导致神经毒性的CATB分泌的蛋白质和途径。使用TMT定量蛋白质组学、生物信息学、利马统计和途径分析,将在接触可卡因之前用BD1047治疗的HIV-1感染女性的MDM培养裂解物与未治疗的对照进行比较。结果表明,与感染可卡因组相比,在接触可卡因之前用BD1047进行预处理会使80种蛋白质失调。我们发现15种蛋白质与HIV-1感染、CATB和线粒体功能有关。上调的蛋白质与氧化磷酸化(SLC25A-31)、线粒体(ATP5PD)、离子转运(VDAC2-3)、内质网转运(PHB、TMED10、CANX)和细胞骨架重塑(TUB1A-C、ANXA1)有关。BD1047治疗通过上调减少线粒体损伤、内质网转运以及与CATB诱导的神经毒性相关的胞吐作用的蛋白质,来保护接触可卡因的HIV-1感染的MDM。