Methamphetamine Induces Metallothionein 1 Expression and an Inflammatory Phenotype in Primary Human HIV-infected Macrophages [JW81_JW82_JW84]
收藏NIAID Data Ecosystem2026-05-10 收录
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https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE307856
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HIV associated neurocognitive impairment (HIV-NCI), a comorbidity of HIV infection, affects up to 50% of people with HIV (PWH). HIV-infected monocytes that transmigrate across the blood brain barrier and differentiate into macrophages establish a CNS viral reservoir that activates and infects parenchymal cells, contributing to neuronal damage that characterizes HIV-NCI. Methamphetamine (meth) use is prevalent in PWH and further impairs cognitive functioning. To examine whether meth-mediated dysregulation of macrophage functions may contribute to increased HIV-NCI, we characterized differential gene expression in primary human HIV-infected macrophages treated daily with meth for five days by RNA-sequencing. We identified increases in multiple gene isoforms of metallothionein 1 (MT1), a heavy metal binding protein involved in protective mechanisms against metal toxicity and oxidative stress. Nuclear localization of MT1 protein was previously shown to either positively or negatively affect NF-κB activity in a cell type specific manner, with nuclear MT1 contributing to LPS-induced TNF-α and IL-6 in macrophages. We found that daily meth treatment for one to five days increased nuclear localization of MT1 in macrophages acutely infected with HIV which was associated with increased LPS-induced CXCL8 and CCL8, and a trend towards increased basal and/or LPS-induced expression of other cytokines/chemokines, including TNF-α and IL-6, that was donor specific. ROS levels were not changed with meth treatment although there was a donor specific trend towards increased ROS with multiple days of meth treatment. These data indicate that repeated exposure of macrophages to meth in the context of HIV increases nuclear MT1 localization, which is associated with increased inflammatory mediator production, and therefore may be a mechanism that contributes to meth-mediated exacerbation of HIV-NCI. Primary human macrophages were obtained from culturing monocytes from healthy individuals and were infected with HIV or left uninfected. After three days of infection, HIV-infected macrophages were treated daily with meth for five days. Uninfected samples were treated daily with emth begining at the same timepoint. *************************************************************** Raw files for human/patient samples were not submitted to GEO due to concerns about submitting personally identifiable sequence data for open access. ***************************************************************
创建时间:
2025-09-29



