共 31 条
The regulation of quinolinic acid in human immunodeficiency virus-infected monocytes
被引:41
作者:
Nottet, HSLM
Flanagan, EM
Flanagan, CR
Gelbard, HA
Gendelman, HE
Reinhard, JF
机构:
[1] UNIV NEBRASKA,MED CTR,DEPT PATHOL & MICROBIOL,OMAHA,NE 68198
[2] UNIV NEBRASKA,MED CTR,DEPT MED,OMAHA,NE 68198
[3] UNIV NEBRASKA,MED CTR,DEPT SURG,OMAHA,NE 68198
[4] UNIV NEBRASKA,MED CTR,EPPLEY INST RES CANC & ALLIED DIS,OMAHA,NE 68198
[5] WELLCOME RES LABS,RES TRIANGLE PK,NC 27709
[6] UNIV ROCHESTER,MED CTR,ROCHESTER,NY 14642
[7] AZU,LAB CELLULAR NEUROIMMUNOL,EIJKMAN WINKLER INST MED MICROBIOL,3584 CX UTRECHT,NETHERLANDS
关键词:
AIDS dementia complex;
macrophage;
astrocyte;
neurotoxins;
cytokines;
D O I:
10.3109/13550289609146544
中图分类号:
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号:
071006 ;
摘要:
Quinolinic acid (Quin) is thought to underlie cognitive and motor dysfunctions for a variety of neurological disorders. Specifically, in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-associated dementia, Quin levels correlate with the degree of neurological dysfunction observed in affected individuals. Since recent data from our laboratories suggest that both HIV-1 infection and activation of brain macrophages are required for the development of neurotoxicity we examined Quin production during virus infection and immune activation, HIV-1 infection of monocytes induced low levels of Quin while lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) activation of the virus-infected cells elicited 10-fold higher levels. The combined effects of LPS and IFN-gamma for Quin production in HIV-infected monocytes was identical to each factor added alone. Little or no Quin was detected in unstimulated uninfected monocytes. LPS or IFN-gamma activation of uninfected monocytes produced substantially higher levels of Quin than found in similarly stimulated HIV-1-infected monocytes. These results were at variance to the production of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha). Here, a 2- to 5-fold increase in TNF-alpha levels were observed in culture fluids of LPS-activated HIV-infected cells when compared to similarly stimulated uninfected monocytes. The effect of LPS-induced Quin production by HIV-infected monocytes was not altered by primary human astrocytes. These data suggest that Quin levels seen in HIV dementia are a reflection of macrophage/microglial activation seen during advanced clinical disease. These findings could help explain, in part, why few HIV-1-infected brain macrophages can give rise to significant neurological impairments.
引用
收藏
页码:111 / 117
页数:7
相关论文