Publication | Closed Access
Intraventricular Injection of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1) Tat Protein Causes Inflammation, Gliosis, Apoptosis, and Ventricular Enlargement
149
Citations
0
References
1998
Year
Intraventricular InjectionVentricular EnlargementImmunologyImmunotherapyNeuroinflammationHuman RetrovirusNeurologyNeuroimmunologyNeurovirologyNeuropharmacologyBrain-immune InteractionNeuroprotectionImmune FunctionHiv-1 Associated DementiaChronic Viral InfectionHivAids PathogenesisTat ProteinAntiviral ResponseNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemMedicine
To determine the role of the Tat protein of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) in the pathogenesis of HIV-1 associated dementia, recombinant Tat was injected intraventricularly as a single or repeated dose into male Sprague-Dawley rats. Histopathological evaluation showed an initial infiltration of neutrophils one day after Tat injection, followed by macrophages and lymphocytes by 7 days. Tat-injected brains also exhibited astrocytosis, apoptotic cells, and ventricular enlargement 7 days following the last injection. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopic analysis of tissue extracts of hippocampi from Tat-injected rats showed a decrease in the glutamate/g aminobutyric acid ratio. We conclude that the transient extracellular exposure of the central nervous system to Tat protein of HIV can cause a cascade of events leading to the influx of inflammatory cells, glial cell activation, and neurotoxicity.