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High level HIV-1 DNA concentrations in brain tissues differentiate patients with post-HAART AIDS dementia complex or cardiovascular disease from those with AIDS
Authors:Li Zhao  Derek C. Galligan  Susanna L. Lamers  Stephanie Yu  Lamia Shagrun  Marco Salemi  Michael S. McGrath
Affiliation:(1) Department of Laboratory Science of Virology, School of Public Health, Shandong University, Jinan, 250012, China;(2) Department of Laboratory Medicine, Positive Health Program, University of California, San Francisco, California 94110, USA;(3) Gene Johnson Inc., St. Augustine, Florida 32080, USA;(4) Pathologica Inc., Burlingame, California 94010, USA;(5) Department of Pathology, Immunology, and Laboratory Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32610, USA
Abstract:Highly active antiretroviral treatment (HAART) has had a significant impact on survival of individuals with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS); however, with the longer life-span of patients with AIDS, there is increasing prevalence of AIDS dementia complex (ADC) and other non-AIDS-defining illness, and cardiovascular diseases (CVD) are also common. The influence of these varied disease processes on HIV-1 DNA concentration in brain tissues has not been thoroughly assessed in the post-HAART era. The purpose of the current study is to clarify the impacts of ADC and other complications of HIV disease on the viral load in the brains in AIDS patients with post-HARRT. We examined autopsy specimens from the brains of thirteen patients who died from complications of AIDS with quantitative polymerase chain reaction (QPCR). All but one patient had received HAART prior to death since 1995. Two patients died with severe CVD, multiple cerebrovascular atherosclerosis (CVA) throughout the brain and five patients died with ADC. Six patients had no ADC/CVA. A QPCR was used to measure the presence of HIV-1 DNA in six brain tissues (meninges, frontal grey matter, frontal white matter, temporal subcortex, cerebellum and basal ganglia). In the post-HARRT era, for non-ADC/CVA patients, HIV-1 DNA concentration in brain tissues was statistically higher than that in patients with ADC. In a new finding, two patients who suffered from severe CVD, especially CVA, also had high concentrations of HIV-1 in brain compartments not showing ADC related changes. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a relationship between the CVA and HIV-1 viral burden in brain. The current observations suggest that HAART-resistant HIV reservoirs may survive within ADC lesions of the brain as well as the macrophage rich atherosclerosis, which needs to be confirmed by more AIDS cases with CVA. Supported by the National Institutes of Health (Grant Nos. NIH ZMH1 BRB-S and UOI CA66259-09 TDC), National Science Foundation (Grant No. NSF DMI-0349669), abd Science & Technology Development Program of Shandong Province (Grant No. 2007GG30002003).
Keywords:HIV-1  AIDS dementia complex  quantitative PCR  DNA  cardiovascular disease  cerebrovascular atherosclerosis
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