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Infection of human immunodeficiency virus and intracellular viral Tat protein exert a pro-survival effect in a human microglial cell line
Authors:Chugh Pauline  Fan Shongshan  Planelles Vicente  Maggirwar Sanjay B  Dewhurst Stephen  Kim Baek
Institution:Department of Microbiology and Immunology, School of Medicine, University of Rochester Medical Center, 601 Elmwood Avenue, Box 672, Rochester, NY 14742, USA.
Abstract:The interaction of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) with CD4+ T lymphocytes is well studied and typically results in virally induced cytolysis. In contrast, relatively little is known concerning the interplay between HIV-1 and microglia. Recent findings suggest that, counter-intuitively, HIV-1 infection may extend the lifespan of microglia. We developed a novel cell line model system to confirm and mechanistically study this phenomenon. We found that transduction of a human microglial cell line with an HIV-1 vector results in a powerful cytoprotective effect following apoptotic challenge. This effect was reproduced by ectopic expression of a single virus-encoded protein, Tat. Subsequent studies showed that the pro-survival effects of intracellular Tat could be attributed to activation of the PI-3-kinase (PI3K)/Akt pathway in the microglial cell line. Furthermore, we found that expression of Tat led to decreased expression of PTEN, a negative regulator of the PI-3-K pathway. Consistent with this, decreased p53 activity and increased E2F activity were observed. Based on these findings, a model of possible regulatory circuits that intracellular Tat and HIV-1 infection engage during the cytoprotective event in microglia has been suggested. We propose that the expression of Tat may enable HIV-1 infected microglia to survive throughout the course of infection, leading to persistent HIV-1 production and infection in the central nervous system.
Keywords:HIV-1  human immunodeficiency virus type 1  PTEN  phosphatase and tensin homolog  CNS  central nervous system  HCV  hepatitis type C virus  HTLV-1  human T-cell leukemia virus type 1  PI-3-K  PI-3-kinase  CHX  cycloheximide  GFP  green fluorescent protein  CMV  cytomegalovirus  LPS  lipopolysaccharide  SNP  sodium nitroprusside  MOI  multiplicity of infection  PBMC  peripheral blood mononuclear cells
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