Publication | Open Access
Detection of HIV-1 Gene Sequences in Hippocampal Neurons Isolated from postmortem AIDS Brains by Laser Capture Microdissection
113
Citations
54
References
2001
Year
NeurogenomicsImmunologyLaser Capture MicrodissectionHiv-1 Gag SequencesBiomedical EngineeringCellular NeurobiologySocial SciencesHuman RetrovirusHiv-1 GagNeuroimmunologyHiv-1 Gene SequencesPostmortem Aids BrainsHivCell BiologyAids PathogenesisCellular NeuroscienceAntiviral ResponseNeuroscienceMedicineNeural Stem Cell
We employed laser capture microdissection to remove individual pyramidal neurons from the CA1, CA3, and CA4 regions of formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded hippocampus from 8 AIDS brains and 2 HIV-1-seronegative normal brains. We amplified HIV-1 gag and nef gene sequences using separate, double round PCR reactions for each of the primer sets. In all 3 hippocampal regions, amplification efficiency was best with sequence length between 284 and 324 bp; HIV-1 nef gene sequences were more common than HIV-1 gag sequences; and rank order for percent positive amplification was CA3 > CA4 > CA1 samples. These results are the first to detect HIV-1 gene sequences in microdissected human tissue. They indicate that brain neurons in vivo contain HIV-1 DNA sequences consistent with latent infection by this virus, and suggest that neurons display a selective vulnerability for HIV infection. Neuronal HIV infection could contribute to neuronal injury and death or act as a potential viral reservoir if reactivated.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1