Grants and Contracts Details
Description
The goal of the Program Project is to understand how opiate drugs exacerbate the effects of HIV in the CNS.
To achieve this goal, we will address the following hypothesis: Opiate drugs, through selective actions at
Il-opioid receptors (MOR), exacerbate the pathogenesis of HIV-1 by disrupting glial homeostasis,
increasing inflammation, and decreasing the threshold for pro-apoptotic events in neurons.
Inflammatory processes and viral products released by human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV) infected cells
cause widespread metabolic derangement, immune dysregulation, disruption of neuron-glial relationships,
and neuronal dysfunction, which contribute to HIV encephalitis and perhaps dementia. Opiate drugs, such
as heroin and oxycodone, intrinsically disrupt CNS function, by interfering with endogenous opioid and
neuroimmune function. CNS disruption and neurotoxicity are exacerbated when opiates are combined with
HIV. Project 1 will examine neurodegenerative mechanisms in opioid and HIV protein-exposed cell cultures
and mice. Neuron death and non-lethal effects (e.g., neuritic pruning) will be examined in ±MOR-expressing
populations of striatal neurons in vitro. Signaling between pre mitochondrial pathways involving PTEN and
Akt will be examined for both caspase-3 dependent and independent cel! death using pharmacological,
transfection (silencing/overexpression vectors) and genetic strategies (MOR-knockout and PTEN-deficient
mice). Project 2 will explore opioid and HIV disruption of astroglial function (e.g., [Ca2+1h oxyradical
production, and EAA T1/2 glutamate transporters) and the release of inflammatory cytokines (e.g., TNFa, IL-
6) in vitro and in vivo, and will identify aspects of astroglial destabilization that contribute to pathological
changes in neurons. Project 3 will examine opioid-HIV-induced changes in free radical production, redoxsensitive
intracellular signaling pathways (e.g., proteasome activity/immunoproteasome subunit expression,
NFKB, MAP kinase) and inflammatory signaling in microglia. Last, studies using conditional transgenic mice
expressing Tat or gp120. and SCID mice inoculated with HIV-infected human monocytes will assess opioid-
HIV effects in neurons, astroglia. and microglia in vivo. The Projects are supported by an administrative core
(Core A), and a transgenic/SCID mouse core (Core B) and recombinant viral protein core (Core B), and common
findings, e.g., on neuronal dysfunction/death will be integrated in Project 1.
Status | Finished |
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Effective start/end date | 8/1/07 → 12/31/07 |
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