Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 infection of the nervous system: Pathogenetic mechanisms
Corresponding Author
Dr. Leon G. Epstein MD
Departments of Neurology, Pediatrics, Microbiology, and Immunology, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY
University of Rochester, Department of Neurology, Box 631, 601 Elmwood Avenue, Rochester, NY 14642Search for more papers by this authorHoward E. Gendelman
Departments of Medicine, Pathology and Microbiology, and the Laboratory of Viral Pathogenesis, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE
Search for more papers by this authorCorresponding Author
Dr. Leon G. Epstein MD
Departments of Neurology, Pediatrics, Microbiology, and Immunology, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY
University of Rochester, Department of Neurology, Box 631, 601 Elmwood Avenue, Rochester, NY 14642Search for more papers by this authorHoward E. Gendelman
Departments of Medicine, Pathology and Microbiology, and the Laboratory of Viral Pathogenesis, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE
Search for more papers by this authorAbstract
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection of the central nervous system is associated with characteristic virological, clinical, and neuropathological findings in adults and children. Productive infection in the brain and spinal cord occurs in blood-derived macrophages, resident microglia, and multinucleated giant cells. Previous work implicated indirect mechanisms for neurotoxicity by HIV-1 gene products or by factors secreted from HIV-1-infected macrophages. However, this cannot explain the paradox between the small numbers of infected cells and the widespread tissue pathology. Based on recent studies from our laboratories, we suggest that HIV-1-infected macrophages can initiate neurotoxicity, which is then amplified through cell-to-cell interactions with astrocytes. Macrophageastrocyte interactions produce cytokines tumor necrosis factor-α and interleukin-1b̃ and arachidonic metabolites that cause astroglial proliferation and neuronal injury. Inevitably, the astrogliosis serves to amplify these cellular processes while brain infection maintains itself in macrophage and microglia and possibly in astrocytes (by restricted infection). These findings, taken together, provide fresh insights into how low numbers of productively infected cells could elicit progressive and devastating neurological impairment during HIV-1 disease, and suggest therapeutic strategies to interrupt the pathological process.
References
- 1 Navia BA, Cho E-S, Petito CK, Price RW. The AIDS dementia complex: II. Neuropathology. Ann Neurol 1986; 19: 525–535
- 2 Sharer LR, Epstein LG, Cho E-S, et al. Pathologic features of AIDS encephalopathy in children: evidence for LAV/HTLV-III infection of brain. Hum Pathol 1986; 17: 271–284
- 3 Wiley CA, Schrier RD, Nelson JA, Lampert PW, Oldstone M B A. Cellular localization of human immunodeficiency virus infection within the brains of acquired immune deficiency syndrome patients. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 1986; 83: 7089–7093
- 4 Sharer LR. Pathology of HIV-1 infection of the central nervous system (review). J Neuropathol Exp Neurol 1992; 51: 3–11
- 5 Michaels J, Sharer LR, Epstein LG. Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection of the nervous system: a review. Immunodefic Rev 1988; 1: 71–104
- 6 Budka H, Wiley CA, Kleihues P, et al. HIV-associated disease of the nervous system: review of nomenclature and proposal for neuropathology-based terminology. Brain Pathol 1991; 1: 143–152
- 7 Epstein LG, Sharer LR, Joshi VV, Fojas MM, Koenigsberger MR, Oleske JM. Progressive encephalopathy in chidren with acquired immune deficiecy syndrome. Ann Neurol 1985; 17: 488–496
- 8 Belman AL, Lantos G, Horoupian D, et al. AIDS: calcification of the basal ganglia in infants and chidren. Neurology 1986; 36: 1192–1199
- 9 Epstein LG, Sharer LR, Oleske J, et al. Neurologic manifestation of HIV infection in children. Pediatrics 1986; 78: 678–687
- 10 Sharer LR, Cho E-S, Epstein LG. Multinucleated giant cells and HTLV-III in AIDS encephalopathy. Hum Pathol 1985; 16: 760
- 11
Epstein LG,
Sharer LR,
Cho E-S,
Meyenhofer MF,
Navia BA,
Price RW.
HTLV-III/LAV like retrovirus particles in the brains of patients with AIDS encephalopathy.
AIDS Res
1985;
1:
447–454
10.1089/aid.1.1983.1.447 Google Scholar
- 12 Koenig S, Gendelman HE, Orenstein JM, et al. Detection of AIDS virus in macrophages in brain tissue from AIDS patients with encephalopathy. Science 1986; 233: 1089–1093
- 13 Ketzler S, Weis S, Haug H, Budka H. Loss of neurons in the frontal cortex in AIDS brains. Acta Neuropathol (Berl) 1990; 80: 92–94
- 14 Everall IP, Luthert PJ, Lantos PL. Neuronal loss in the frontal cortex in HIV infection. Lancet 1991; 337: 1119–1121
- 15 Wiley CA, Masliah E, Morey M, et al. Neocortical damage during HIV infection. Ann Neurol 1991; 29: 651–657
- 16 Navia BA, Jordan BD, Price RW. The AIDS dementia complex: I. Clinical features. Ann Neurol 1986; 19: 517–524
- 17 Janssen RS, Cornblath DR, Epstein LG, et al. Nomenclature and research case definitions for neurologic manifestations of human immunodeficiency virus-type 1 (HIV-1) infection. Neurology 1991; 41: 773–785
- 18 Price RW, Brew B, Sidtis J, Rosenblum M, Scheck AC, Cleary P. The brain in AIDS: central nervous system infection and AIDS dementia complex. Science 1988; 239: 586–592
- 19 Vazeux R, Lacroix-Ciaudo C, Blanche S, et al. Low levels of human immunodeficiency virus replication in the brain tissue of children with severe acquired immunodeficiency syndrome encephalopathy. Am J Pathol 1992; 140: 137–144
- 20 Merrill JE, Chen I S Y. HIV-1, macrophages, glial cells, and cytokines in AIDS nervous system disease. FASEB J 1991; 5: 2391–2397
- 21 Tyor WR, Glass JD, Griffin JW, et al. Cytokine expression in the brain during the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. Ann Neurol 1992; 31: 349–360
- 22 Genis P, Jett M, Bernton EW, et al. Cytokines and arachidonic acid metabolites produced during HIV-infected macrophageastroglial interactions: implications for the neuropathogenesis of HIV disease. J Exp Med 1992; 176: 1703–1718
- 23 Gendelman HE, Genis P, Jett M, et al. Experimental model systems for studies of HIV-associated CNS disease. In: L Montagnier, M L Gougeon, eds. New concepts in AIDS pathogenesis. New York: Marcel Dekker, (in press)
- 24 Resnick L, DiMarzo-Veronese F, Schupbach J, et al. Intrablood-brain-barrier synthesis of HTLV-III specific IgG in patients with neurologic symptoms associated with AIDS or AIDS-related complex. N Engl J Med 1985; 313: 1498–1504
- 25 Ho DD, Rota TR, Schooley RT, et al. Isolation of HTLV-III from CSF and neural tissues of patients with AIDS related neurologic syndromes. N Engl J Med 1985; 313: 1493–1497
- 26 Epstein LG, Goudsmit J, Paul DA, et al. HIV expression in the cerebrospinal fluid of children with progressive encephalopathy. Ann Neurol 1987; 21; 396–401
- 27 McArthur JC, Cohen BA, Farzedegan H, et al. Cerebrospinal fluid abnormalities in homosexual men with and without neuropsychiatric findings. Ann Neurol 1988; 23 (suppl): S34–S37
- 28 Goudsmit J, de Wolf F, Paul DA, et al. Expression of human immunodeficiency virus antigen (HIV-ag) in serum and cerebrospinal fluid during acute and chronic infection. Lancet 1986; 2: 177–180
- 29 Sharer LR, Michaels J, Murphey-Corb M, et al. Serial pathogenesis study of SIV brain infection. J Med Primatol 1991; 20: 211–217
- 30 Peluso R, Haase A, Stowring L, Edwards M, Ventura P. A trojan horse mechanism for the spread of visna virus in monocytes. Virology 1985; 147: 231–236
- 31 Harouse JM, Wroblewska Z, Laughlin MA, Hickey WF, Schonwetter BS, Gonzalez-Scarano F. Human choroid plexus cells can be latently infected with human immunodeficiency virus. Ann Neurol 1989; 25: 406–411
- 32 Desrosiers RC, Hansen-Moosa A, Mori K, et al. Macrophagetropic variants of SIV are associated with specific AIDS-related lesions but are not essential for the development of AIDS. Am J Pathol 1991; 139: 29–35
- 33 Westervelt P, Trowbridge DB, Epstein LG, et al. Identification of envelope determinants from uncultured isolates which regulate HIV-1 tropism for macrophage. J Virol 1992; 66: 2577–2582
- 34 Sharma DP, Zink MC, Anderson M, et al. Derivation of neurotropic simian immunodeficiency virus from exclusively lymphocyte-tropic parental virus: pathogenesis of infection in macaques. J Virol 1992; 66: 3550–3556
- 35 Westervelt P, Gendelman HE, Ratner L. Identification of a determinant within the human immunodeficiency virus 1 surface envelope glycoprotein critical for productive infection of primay monocytes. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 1991; 88: 3097–3101
- 36 Epstein LG, Kuiken C, Blumberg BM, et al. HIV-1 V3 domain variation in brain and spleen of children with AIDS: tissue specific evolution within host-determined quasispecies. Virology 1991; 180: 583–590
- 37 Shaw GM, Harper ME, Hahh BE, et al. HTLV-III infection in brains of children and adults with AIDS encephalopathy. Science 1985; 1: 177–182
- 38 Pang S, Koyanagi Y, Miles S, Wiley C, Vinters HV, Chen I S Y. High levels of unintegrated HIV-1 DNA in brain tissue of AIDS dementia patients. Nature 1990; 343: 85–89
- 39 Stoler MH, Eskin TA, Benn S, et al. Human T-cell lymphotropic virus type III infection of the central nervous system–A preliminary in situ analysis. JAMA 1986; 256: 2381–2383
- 40 Sharer LR, Dowling PC, Michaels J, et al. Spinal cord disease in children with HIV-1 infection: a combined molecular and neuropathological study. Neuropathol Appl Neurobiol 1990; 16: 317–331
- 41 Michaels J, Price RW, Rosenblum MK. Microglia in the giant cell encephalitis of AIDS: proliferation, infection, and fusion. Acta Neuropathol (Berl) 1988; 76: 373–379
- 42 Dewhurst S, Sakai K, Bresser J, et al. Persistent productive infection of human glial cells by human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and by infectious molecular clones of HIV. J Virol 1987; 61: 3774–3782
- 43 Brack-Werner R, Kleinschmidt A, Ludvigsen A, et al. Infection of human brain cells by HIV-1: restricted virus production in chronically infected human glial cell lines. AIDS 1992; 6: 273–285
- 44 Blumberg BM, Epstein LG, Saito Y, et al. Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 nef quasispecies in pathological tissue. J Virol 1992; 66: 5256–5264
- 45 Schwartz S, Felber BK, Benko DM, et al. Cloning and functional analysis of multiply spliced mRNA species of human immunodeficiency virus type 1. J Virol 1990; 64: 2519–2529
- 46 Harouse JM, Bhat S, Spitalnik SL, et al. Inhibition of entry of HIV-1 in neural cell lines by antibodies against galactosyl ceramide. Science 1991; 253: 320–323
- 47 Mizrachi Y, Zeira M, Shahabuddin M, et al. Efficient binding, fusion and entry of HIV-1 into CD4-negative neural cells: a mechanism for neuropathogenesis in AIDS. Bull Inst Pasteur 1991; 89: 81–96
- 48 Dreyer EB, Kaiser PK, Offerman JT, Lipton SA. HIV-1 coat protein neurotoxicity prevented by calcium channel antagonists. Science 1990; 248: 364–367
- 49 Lipton SA. Models of neuronal injury in AIDS: another role for the NMDA receptor? Trends Neurosci 1992; 15: 75–79
- 50 Brenneman DE, Westbrook GL, Fitzgerald SP, et al. Neuronal cell killing by the envelope protein of HIV and its prevention by vasoactive intestinal peptide. Nature 1988; 335: 639–642
- 51 Lipton SA. Requirement for macrophages in neuronal injury induced by HIV envelope protein gp 120. Neuroreport 1992; 3: 913–915
- 52 Lipton SA. Human Immunodeficiency Virus-infected macrophages, gp120 and N-Methyl-D-Asparate neurotoxicity. Ann Neurol 1993; 33: 227–228
- 53 Pulliam L, Herndier BG, Tang NM, McGrath MS. Human immunodeficiency virus-infected macrophages produce soluble factors that cause histological and neurochemical alterations in cultured human brains. J Clin Invest 1991; 87: 503–512
- 54 Giulian D, Vaca N, Noonan CA. Secretion of neurotoxins by mononuclear phagocytes infected with HIV-1. Science 1991; 250: 1593–1596
- 55 Merrill JE, Koyanagi Y, Zack J, et al. Induction of interleukin-1 and tumor necrosis factor alpha in brain cultures by human immunodeficiency virus type 1. J Virol 1992; 66: 2217–2221
- 56 Bernton E, Bryant H, Decoster M, et al. No direct neuronotoxicity by HIV-1 virions or culture fluids from HIV-1 infected T-cells or monocytes. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 1992; 8: 495–501
- 57 Tardieu M, Hery C, Peudenier S, et al. Human immunodeficiency virus type 1-infected monocytic cells can destroy human neural cells after cell-to-cell adhesion. Ann Neurol 1992; 32: 11–17
- 58 Robbins DS, Shirzai Y, Drysdale B, et al. Production of cytoxic factor for oligodendrocytes by stimulated astrocytes. J Immunol 1987; 139: 2593–2597
- 59 Selmaj KW, Raine CS. Tumor necrosis factor mediates myelin and oligodendrocyte damage in vitro. Ann Neurol 1988; 23: 339–346
- 60 Vitkovic L, Kalebic T, de Cunha A. Fauci AS. Astrocyteconditioned medium stimulates HIV-1 expression in a chronically infected promonocyte clone. J Immunol 1990; 30: 153–160
- 61 Tornatore C, Nath A, Amemiya K, Major EO. Persistent HIV-1 infection in human fetal glial cells reactivated by T-cell factor(s) or by the cytokines tumor necrosis factor alpha and interleukin 1 beta. J Virol 1991; 65: 6094–6100
- 62 Wahl LM, Corcoran ML, Pyle SW, et al. Human immunodeficiency virus glycoprotein (gp 120) induction of monocyte arachidonic acid metabolites and interleukin 1. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 1989; 86: 621–625
- 63 Conti P, Reale M, Barbacane RC, et al. The combination of interleukin 1 plus tumor necrosis factor causes greater generation of LTB4, thromboxanes and aggregation on human macrophages than these compounds alone. Prostaglandins in clinical research: cardiovascular system. New York: Alan R Liss, 1989
- 64 Dubois C, Bissonnette E, Rola-Pleszcynski M. Platelet-activating factor (PAF) enhances tumor necrosis factor production by alveolar macrophages: prevention by PAF receptor antagonists and lipoxygenase inhibitors. J Immunol 1989; 143: 964–970
- 65 Poubelle PE, Gingras D, Demers C, et al. Platelet-activating factor (PAF-acether) enhances the concomitant production of tumor necrosis factor-alpha and interleukin-1 by subsets of human monocytes. Immunology 1991; 72: 181–185
- 66 Mauerhoff T, PuJol-Borrell R, Mirakian R, Bottazzo GF. Differential expression and regulation of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) products in neural and glial cells of the human fetal brain. J Neuroimmunol 1988; 18: 271–289
- 67 Satoh J-I, Kastrukoff LF, Kim SU. Cytokine-induced expression of intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1) in cultured human oligodendrocytes and astrocytes. J Neuropathol Exp Neurol 1991; 50: 215–226
- 68 Selmaj KN, Farooq M, Norton T, et al. Proliferation of astrocytes in vitro in response to cytokines. J Immunol 1990; 144: 129–135
- 69 Chung IY, Benveniste EN. Tumor necrosis factor-alpha production by astrocytes: induction by lipopolysaccharide, interferongamma and interleukin-1. J Immunol 1990; 144: 2999–3007
- 70 Cvetkovich TA, Lazar E, Blumberg BM, et al. Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection of neural xenografts. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 1992; 11: 5162–5166
- 71 Epstein LG, Cvetkovich TA, Lazar E, et al. Successful xenografts of second trimester human fetal brain and retinal tissue in the anterior chamber of the eye of adult immunosuppressed rats. J Neural Transplant Plast 1992; 3: 151–158
- 72 Lipton SA, Sucher NJ, Kaiser PK, Dreyer EB. Synergistic effects of the HIV coat protein and NMDA receptor-mediated neurotoxicity. Neuron 1991; 7: 111–118
- 73 Dawson VL, Dawson TM, Uhl GR, Snyder SH. HIV coat protein neurotoxicity mediated by nitric oxide in primary cortical cultures. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA (in press)
- 74 Lipton SA. Laboratory basis of novel therapeutic strategies to prevent HIV related neuronal injiury. In: R W Price, S W Perry, eds. HIV, AIDS and the brain, vol 72. Association for Research in Nervous and Mental Diseases, and the New York Academy of Medicine. New York: Raven, (in press)
- 75 Volterra A, Trotti D, Cassutti P, et al. High sensitivity of glutamate uptake to extracellular arachidonic acid levels in rat cortical synaptosomes and astrocytes. J Neurochem 1992; 59: 600–606
- 76 Heyes MP, Rubinow D, Lane C, et al. Cerebrospinal fluid quinolinic acid concentrations are increased in acquired immune deficiency syndrome. Ann Neurol 1989; 26: 275–277
- 77 Heyes MP, Brew BJ, Martin A, et al. Quinolinic acid in cerebrospinal fluid and serum in HIV-1 infection: relationship to clinical and neurological status. Ann Neurol 1991; 29: 202–209