Get Newsletter
Alzheimer Research Forum - Networking for a Cure Alzheimer Research Forum - Networking for a CureAlzheimer Research Forum - Networking for a Cure
  
What's New HomeContact UsHow to CiteGet NewsletterBecome a MemberLogin          
Papers of the Week
Current Papers
ARF Recommends
Milestone Papers
Search All Papers
Search Comments
News
Research News
Drug News
Conference News
Research
AD Hypotheses
  AlzSWAN
  Current Hypotheses
  Hypothesis Factory
Forums
  Live Discussions
  Virtual Conferences
  Interviews
Enabling Technologies
  Workshops
  Research Tools
Compendia
  AlzGene
  AlzRisk
  Antibodies
  Biomarkers
  Mutations
  Protocols
  Research Models
  Video Gallery
Resources
  Bulletin Boards
  Conference Calendar
  Grants
  Jobs
Early-Onset Familial AD
Overview
Diagnosis/Genetics
Research
News
Profiles
Clinics
Drug Development
Companies
Tutorial
Drugs in Clinical Trials
Disease Management
About Alzheimer's
  FAQs
Diagnosis
  Clinical Guidelines
  Tests
  Brain Banks
Treatment
  Drugs and Therapies
Caregiving
  Patient Care
  Support Directory
  AD Experiences
Community
Member Directory
Researcher Profiles
Institutes and Labs
About the Site
Mission
ARF Team
ARF Awards
Advisory Board
Sponsors
Partnerships
Fan Mail
Support Us
Return to Top
Home: News
News
News Search  
San Diego: HIV and AD—Save the Body, Lose the Mind?
26 October 2004. Drug cocktails have transformed HIV infection from a deadly to a chronic disease, giving HIV carriers a new lease on life. But new long-term consequences of harboring the virus and of taking powerful drugs indefinitely keep cropping up, and the prospect of an Alzheimer’s-like dementia is the latest one. At the 34th meeting of the Society for Neuroscience here in San Diego, Cristian Achim of the University of Pittsburgh Medical School, and Lynn Pulliam of UCSF, yesterday and today presented early data suggesting that middle-aged people with HIV who are on highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) develop Aβ deposition, both inside neurons and as extracellular plaques. The two labs are working independently of each other.

It’s long been known that HIV infection will affect the brain at some point, but this is different, the scientists report. The brain can become a reservoir for the virus even while it is undetectable in blood and the HAART-treated patient shows no outward signs of disease. Accompanying HIV-associated risk factors for dementia include damage to the blood-brain barrier, infiltration of monocytes/macrophages (which most likely carry in the virus), and high levels of inflammatory cytokines. On top of that, a more specific risk for Alzheimer’s pathology may arise from two related processes, the scientists proposed. For one, these patients tend to develop high levels of insulin and insulin resistance, and this may have to do with interactions between the HIV drugs and the Aβ-degrading enzyme IDE, Achim’s work suggests. For another, an HIV protein called stat inhibits neprilysin, another enzyme that keeps Aβ levels down, reported Pulliam.

Achim described early data of an ongoing study in which he assessed amyloid deposition in postmortem tissue of 162 cases aged 25 to 70, with an average of 40, from the University of California Los Angeles and San Diego. These people had not had HIV encephalitis. Sixty percent of them had intraneuronal Aβ deposition confirmed by immunoelectron microscopy, and half of those also had extracellular deposits, mostly diffuse plaques, but no tangles. Achim hopes to follow a group of patients on long-term HAART forward with the PET amyloid imaging agent PIB to test how amyloid deposition correlates with cognitive performance over time.

Pulliam took a different tack by studying the effect of tat, an HIV protein secreted from infected macrophages and microglia, on neprilysin. Tat inhibited neprilysin in membrane preparations from human brain cultures and led to an increase in Aβ when added to cultures directly. Then she looked for Aβ in autopsy brain sections and, like Achim, found that middle-aged people with HIV had more plaques, large diffuse ones, than did controls. Plaque number correlated with how many years the person had been infected, but not with age. Whether this AD pathology leads to clinical Alzheimer disease is unclear, as is the question of how ApoE genotype influences the outcome. Even so, independent scientists at the conference agreed that long-term HAART-treated HIV survivors might constitute a new natural model of a form of Alzheimer’s.

This study will encourage researchers who propose that bacterial or viral pathogens cause some cases of sporadic Alzheimer’s see (Alzforum Discussion). This view is not widely held in the field, but it gained support from a presentation from Pat McGeer’s lab at University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada, reporting the cultivation of Borrelia burgdorferi spirochetes (the bacteria that cause Lyme disease) from Alzheimer brains.—Gabrielle Strobel.

 
Comments on News and Primary Papers
  Comment by:  Rafal Smigrodzki
Submitted 27 October 2004  |  Permalink Posted 29 October 2004

The finding of accumulation of β amyloid in persons exposed to HAART appears to parallel the situation with Parkinson disease and MPP. In both cases we have a natural experiment, where unintentional exposure to a toxic agent replicates some features of a sporadic neurodegenerative disorder.

In the case of PD, intake of the mitochondrial complex I inhibitor, MPTP, reproduces clinical and pathological features of PD, and provides a model for research on the disease. The MPTP finding led to the discovery of complex I dysfunction in PD (Parker, 1989), the rodent model of PD (Greenamyre, 2003), and eventually to the recent finding of microheteroplasmic mtDNA mutations which correlate with the phenotype (Smigrodzki, 2004).

One might hope that the availability of a human model of AD, which (in contrast to existing models based on β amyloid) has both the signature pathology and dementia, will reinvigorate AD research. Mitochondrial toxicity of HAART is well-established, and given the other evidence in favor of mtDNA dysfunction in AD (complex IV dysfunction (Parker,...  Read more


  Comment by:  Shaharyar Khan
Submitted 27 October 2004  |  Permalink Posted 29 October 2004

The preliminary reports at the Society for Neuroscience meeting in San Diego that nucleoside anti-retroviral therapy can produce AD-like pathology in human beings is of great potential interest. HAART has been under scrutiny for some time, as it produces toxicities that include lipodystrophy, myopathy, and encephalopathy. The mechanism of this toxicity seems to center on the mitochondria, as nucleosides inhibit not only viral polymerases, but also the mitochondrial DNA polymerase, as well. This causes a drop in levels of mitochondrial DNA in a variety of tissues, an increase in ROS production, and an eventual drop in oxidative metabolism.

The association between AD and mitochondrial dysfunction has also been the subject of much work (and is hypothesized in Swerdlow and Khan). That HAART initiates intraneuronal Aβ and diffuse plaque deposition further points to the mitochondria as the nexus for AD, emphasizing that amyloid is subsequent to mitochondrial dysfunction. How this mitochondrial dysfunction causes amyloid deposition is an area of active pursuit in our lab....  Read more


  Comment by:  Brian Balin
Submitted 1 November 2004  |  Permalink Posted 3 November 2004

The new studies by Pulliam and Achim provide an interesting parallel in HIV-infected humans to what has recently been reported by us in our studies of Chlamydophila (Chlamydia) pneumoniae infection of BALB/c mice (see Little et al., 2004). In essence, we observed plaques that labeled with antibodies to Aβ1-42 as well as intracellular neuronal Aβ1-42 immunoreactivity in some areas of the brain. The plaques developed over a one- to three-month period following intranasal inoculation of the organism. More plaques appeared after three months than after one, suggesting that longer infection times resulted in more plaques. More recent, but unpublished studies, show that more inoculations and longer postinfection times also result in larger and greater numbers of plaques in the brains. In the Achim study, plaque number correlated with length of time a person was infected with HIV, but not with the age of the person.

One of the most important features of the two HIV studies is the precedence of infection...  Read more


  Comment by:  Ruth Itzhaki
Submitted 19 November 2004  |  Permalink Posted 19 November 2004

It was good to read the report on the AIDS study presented at San Diego by Lynn Pulliam and colleagues, because her poster on this topic at the International AD conference in Philadelphia in July might not have been seen by many. However, it is worth mentioning that back in 1998, Margaret Esiri and colleagues reported detection of argyrophilic amyloid plaques in the cerebral cortex (temporal and frontal lobes) of 97 AIDS patients; in the controls and the AIDS patients, the plaque prevalence increased with age and was significantly greater in the AIDS group as a whole. (Incidentally, in another virus-induced brain disease, sub-acute sclerosing panencephalitis, the agent—measles virus—has long been known to induce the formation of NFT, the other hallmark of AD brain). These studies, and that of Achim et al., add to the diverse body of work linking β-amyloid or APP with viruses, such as the detection of a sequence homology between the glycoprotein gB of HSV1 and β-amyloid (Cribbs et al., 2000), and evidence of the association between APP and HSV1 during axonal transport of the virus...  Read more
  Submit a Comment on this News Article
Cast your vote and/or make a comment on this news article. 

If you already are a member, please login.
Not sure if you are a member? Search our member database.

*First Name  
*Last Name  
Country or Territory:
*Login Email Address  
*Password    Minimum of 8 characters
*Confirm Password  
Stay signed in?  

Comment:

(If coauthors exist for this comment, please enter their names and email addresses at the end of the comment.)

References:


*Enter the verification code you see in the picture below:


This helps Alzforum prevent automated registrations.

Terms and Conditions of Use:Printable Version

By clicking on the 'I accept' below, you are agreeing to the Terms and Conditions of Use above.
Print this page
Email this page
Alzforum News
Papers of the Week
Text size
Share & Bookmark
ADNI Related Links
ADNI Data at LONI
ADNI Information
DIAN
Foundation for the NIH
AddNeuroMed
neuGRID
Desperately

Antibodies
Cell Lines
Collaborators
Papers
Research Participants
Copyright © 1996-2013 Alzheimer Research Forum Terms of Use How to Cite Privacy Policy Disclaimer Disclosure Copyright
wma logoadadad