Publication | Open Access
HIV-1 gp120 Proteins and gp160 Peptides Are Toxic to Brain Endothelial Cells and Neurons: Possible Pathway for HIV Entry into the Brain and HIV-Associated Dementia
84
Citations
65
References
2002
Year
Gp160 PeptidesBrain MacrophagesImmunologyHiv-1 Gp160 PeptidesNeuroinflammationAlzheimer's DiseaseHuman RetrovirusBrain InjuryNeurologyHiv-1 Gp120 ProteinsBrain Endothelial CellsNeuropathologyNeuroimmunologyNeurovirologyBrain-immune InteractionNeuroprotectionHivCerebral Blood FlowAids PathogenesisBlood–brain BarrierNeuroscienceMedicine
Breakdown of the blood-brain barrier is commonly seen in patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-associated dementia, despite the lack of productive HIV-infection of the brain endothelium. Through this damaged blood-brain barrier, HIV and HIV-infected monocytes/macrophages infiltrate the brain and further infect microglia and brain macrophages. Neuronal cell death and dysfunction are the underlying cause of HIV-associated dementia, but no productive HIV-infection of neurons has been documented. It is likely that secreted viral products play a major role in blood-brain barrier damage and neuronal cell death. The aim of the present study was to examine the effect of HIV-1 gp160 peptides and gp120 proteins on brain microvascular endothelial cells and neurons from both human and rats. Four of the 7 gp160 peptides tested evoked significant neurotoxicity. Two different full-length recombinant HIV gp120 proteins (HIV-1CM235 gp120 and HIV-1MN gp120) also induced neuronal and brain endothelial cell death, and concentrations as little as 1 ng/ml evoked pronounced morphological changes in these cells and marked cytotoxicity. This study suggests that HIV proteins and peptides that are shed in vivo may be directly involved in blood-brain barrier damage and neuronal cell death in HIV-associated dementia.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1