Bukrinsky M I, Nottet H S, Schmidtmayerova H, Dubrovsky L, Flanagan C R, Mullins M E, Lipton S A, Gendelman H E
Picower Institute for Medical Research, Manhasset, New York 11030.
J Exp Med. 1995 Feb 1;181(2):735-45. doi: 10.1084/jem.181.2.735.
Mononuclear phagocytes (monocytes, macrophages, and dendritic cells) play major roles in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) persistence and disease pathogenesis. Macrophage antigen presentation and effector cell functions are impaired by HIV-1 infection. Abnormalities of macrophage effector cell function in bone marrow, lung, and brain likely result as a direct consequence of cellular activation and HIV replication. To further elucidate the extent of macrophage dysfunction in HIV-1 disease, a critical activation-specific regulatory molecule, nitric oxide (NO.), which may contribute to diverse pathology, was studied. Little, if any, NO. is produced by uninfected human monocytes. In contrast, infection with HIV-1 increases NO. production to modest, but significant levels (2-5 microM). Monocyte activation (with lipopolysaccharide, tumor necrosis factor alpha, or through interactions with astroglial cells) further enhances NO. production in HIV-infected cells, whereas its levels are diminished by interleukin 4. These results suggest a possible role for NO. in HIV-associated pathology where virus-infected macrophages are found. In support of this hypothesis, RNA encoding the inducible NO synthase (iNOS) was detected in postmortem brain tissue from one pediatric AIDS patient with advanced HIV encephalitis. Corresponding iNOS mRNA was not detected in brain tissue from five AIDS patients who died with less significant brain disease. These results demonstrate that HIV-1 can influence the expression of NOS in both cultured human monocytes and brain tissue. This newly described feature of HIV-macrophage interactions suggests previously unappreciated mechanisms of tissue pathology that result from productive viral replication.
单核吞噬细胞(单核细胞、巨噬细胞和树突状细胞)在人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)的持续存在和疾病发病机制中起主要作用。HIV-1感染会损害巨噬细胞的抗原呈递和效应细胞功能。骨髓、肺和脑中巨噬细胞效应细胞功能的异常可能是细胞活化和HIV复制的直接结果。为了进一步阐明HIV-1疾病中巨噬细胞功能障碍的程度,研究了一种可能导致多种病理变化的关键激活特异性调节分子——一氧化氮(NO.)。未感染的人类单核细胞几乎不产生NO.。相比之下,HIV-1感染会使NO.的产生增加到适度但显著的水平(2-5微摩尔)。单核细胞激活(用脂多糖、肿瘤坏死因子α或通过与星形胶质细胞相互作用)会进一步增强HIV感染细胞中NO.的产生,而白细胞介素4会降低其水平。这些结果表明NO.在发现病毒感染巨噬细胞的HIV相关病理中可能发挥作用。为支持这一假设,在一名患有晚期HIV脑炎的儿科艾滋病患者的死后脑组织中检测到了编码诱导型一氧化氮合酶(iNOS)的RNA。在五名死于脑部疾病较轻的艾滋病患者的脑组织中未检测到相应的iNOS mRNA。这些结果表明,HIV-1可以影响培养的人类单核细胞和脑组织中NOS的表达。HIV与巨噬细胞相互作用的这一新描述特征提示了由病毒有效复制导致的先前未被认识的组织病理机制。