Cornaglia-Ferraris P, De Maria A, Cirillo C, Cara A, Alessandri G
Department of Pediatric Hematology/Oncology, G. Gaslini Children's Hospital, Genoa, Italy.
Pediatr Res. 1995 Nov;38(5):792-6. doi: 10.1203/00006450-199511000-00025.
Several neuropathologic findings in infants and children with human immunodeficiency virus type-1 (HIV-1) infection are different from those observed in adults, probably related to the fact that the retroviral infection occurs in the setting of neuro-development. This report describes the interaction and biologic activity of tat, the HIV-1 trans-activating protein on human neuroblasts. Two human neuroblastoma cell lines, LAN-5 and GI-CA-N, have been studied for their capability to adhere to tat (full recombinant protein) and to two different peptide residues of it. Both cells adhere to tat and tat46-60 basic domain, although not to tat65-80 residue, which contains the RGD (arginine-glycine-aspartic acid) motif. Adhesion to collagen I was inhibited by preincubating GI-CA-N cells with tat,46-60 although not with tat,65-80 indicating the capability of the basic residue to interfere with collagen I-induced cellular adhesion. The expression of 200-kD neurofilaments induced by collagen I was not induced by tat,46-60 indicating that neural differentiation along the same pathway is not mimicked by this peptide. Neuroblast cell proliferation was not affected by adhesion to tat46-60 nor to tat.65-80 GI-CA-N cells are not permissive to HIV-1 infection. However, proviral DNA was documented in the cell lysate for 14 consecutive in vitro passages, whereas HIV-1 transcription was never detectable. This would exclude the possibility that tat would be transduced by these cells. GI-CA-N stained negative for CD4, although positive for Gal-C, which may explain HIV-1 entry. Results show that immature human neural cells interact with tat protein and/or its basic residue in vitro. A mechanism similar to that herein described would possibly be active in vivo, which may help in clarifying the pathogenic mechanisms of neurologic dysfunction and destruction of the CNS observed in infants infected with HIV-1.
1型人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV-1)感染的婴幼儿和儿童的一些神经病理学发现与成人中观察到的不同,这可能与逆转录病毒感染发生在神经发育背景下这一事实有关。本报告描述了HIV-1反式激活蛋白tat对人神经母细胞的相互作用和生物学活性。对两种人神经母细胞瘤细胞系LAN-5和GI-CA-N研究了它们黏附于tat(完全重组蛋白)及其两个不同肽段的能力。两种细胞均能黏附于tat和tat46-60碱性结构域,但不黏附于含有RGD(精氨酸-甘氨酸-天冬氨酸)基序的tat65-80肽段。用tat46-60预孵育GI-CA-N细胞可抑制其对I型胶原的黏附,但用tat65-80预孵育则无此作用,这表明碱性结构域能够干扰I型胶原诱导的细胞黏附。I型胶原诱导的200-kD神经丝蛋白的表达未被tat46-60诱导,这表明该肽段不能模拟沿同一途径的神经分化。神经母细胞增殖不受黏附于tat46-60或tat65-80的影响。GI-CA-N细胞对HIV-1感染不敏感。然而,在连续14次体外传代的细胞裂解物中记录到了前病毒DNA,而从未检测到HIV-1转录。这将排除tat被这些细胞转导的可能性。GI-CA-N细胞CD4染色阴性,但Gal-C染色阳性,这可能解释了HIV-1的进入。结果表明,未成熟的人神经细胞在体外与tat蛋白和/或其碱性结构域相互作用。一种类似于本文所述的机制可能在体内起作用,这可能有助于阐明在感染HIV-1的婴儿中观察到的神经功能障碍和中枢神经系统破坏的致病机制。