Sharp B M, Gekker G, Li M D, Chao C C, Peterson P K
Immunomodulation Laboratory Institute for Brain and Immune Disorders, Minneapolis Medical Research Foundation, MN 55404, USA.
Biochem Pharmacol. 1998 Aug 1;56(3):289-92. doi: 10.1016/s0006-2952(98)00155-5.
Delta-opioid receptor (DOR) transcripts and binding sites are expressed by lymphocytes and lymphoid cell lines from several species. Direct modulation of lymphocyte function through DORs affects T cell proliferation, interleukin-2 production, chemotaxis, and intracellular signaling. Moreover, in human DOR-transfected T cells (DOR-Ju.1), delta-opioids have been shown previously to mobilize intracellular calcium rapidly, to inhibit forskolin-stimulated cyclic AMP production, and to activate the mitogen-activated protein kinases ERKs 1 and 2. These observations led us to consider whether delta agonists modify T cell functions, thus affecting the expression of human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) by CD4+ T cells. To test this hypothesis, DOR-Ju.1 cells, derived from Jurkat cells stably transfected with a cDNA encoding the neuronal DOR, were stimulated with deltorphin or benzamide, 4-[2,5-dimethyl-4-(2-propenyl)-1-piperazinylmethyl]N- ,[2S[(S*),2alpha,5beta]]-(9Cl) (SNC-80) prior to the addition of HIV-1. Both deltorphin and SNC-80 concentration-dependently inhibited the production of p24 antigen, an index of HIV-1 expression. Inhibition was maximal with 10(-13)-10(-9) M SNC-80 (>60% reduction) or 10(-15)-10(-11) M deltorphin (>50% reduction). At higher concentrations, less inhibition of p24 antigen production was found. Naltrindole (NTI, 10(-11) M), a selective DOR antagonist, abolished the inhibitory effects of 10(-9) M SNC-80, whereas 10(-13) M NTI partially reversed the effect of SNC-80. Thus, activation of DORs expressed by CD4+ T cells significantly (P < 0.05) reduced the expression of HIV-1 by these cells. These findings suggest that opioid immunomodulation directed at host T cells may be adjunctive to standard antiviral approaches to HIV-1 infection.
δ-阿片受体(DOR)转录本和结合位点在来自多个物种的淋巴细胞和淋巴样细胞系中表达。通过DOR直接调节淋巴细胞功能会影响T细胞增殖、白细胞介素-2产生、趋化作用和细胞内信号传导。此外,在人DOR转染的T细胞(DOR-Ju.1)中,先前已表明δ-阿片类药物可迅速动员细胞内钙、抑制福斯可林刺激的环磷酸腺苷产生,并激活丝裂原活化蛋白激酶ERK1和ERK2。这些观察结果使我们思考δ-激动剂是否会改变T细胞功能,从而影响CD4 + T细胞对人免疫缺陷病毒1型(HIV-1)的表达。为了验证这一假设,在用HIV-1感染之前,用强啡肽或苯甲酰胺、4-[[2,5-二甲基-4-(2-丙烯基)-1-哌嗪基](3-甲氧基苯基)甲基] -N,[2S [(S *),2α,5β]]-(9Cl)(SNC-80)刺激源自稳定转染了编码神经元DOR的cDNA的Jurkat细胞的DOR-Ju.1细胞。强啡肽和SNC-80均浓度依赖性地抑制p24抗原的产生,p24抗原是HIV-1表达的一个指标。用10(-13)-10(-9)M SNC-80(降低> 60%)或10(-15)-10(-11)M强啡肽(降低> 50%)时抑制作用最大。在更高浓度下,发现对p24抗原产生的抑制作用较小。选择性DOR拮抗剂纳曲吲哚(NTI,10(-11)M)消除了10(-9)M SNC-80的抑制作用,而10(-13)M NTI部分逆转了SNC-80的作用。因此,CD4 + T细胞表达的DOR的激活显著(P <0.05)降低了这些细胞中HIV-1的表达。这些发现表明,针对宿主T细胞的阿片类免疫调节可能是HIV-1感染标准抗病毒方法的辅助手段。