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HIV-1 and recombinant gp120 affect the survival and differentiation of human vessel wall-derived mesenchymal stem cells

BACKGROUND: HIV infection elicits the onset of a progressive immunodeficiency and also damages several other organs and tissues such as the CNS, kidney, heart, blood vessels, adipose tissue and bone. In particular, HIV infection has been related to an increased incidence of cardiovascular diseases a...

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Autores principales: Gibellini, Davide, Alviano, Francesco, Miserocchi, Anna, Tazzari, Pier Luigi, Ricci, Francesca, Clò, Alberto, Morini, Silvia, Borderi, Marco, Viale, Pierluigi, Pasquinelli, Gianandrea, Pagliaro, Pasqualepaolo, Bagnara, Gian Paolo, Re, Maria Carla
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3123274/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21612582
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-8-40
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author Gibellini, Davide
Alviano, Francesco
Miserocchi, Anna
Tazzari, Pier Luigi
Ricci, Francesca
Clò, Alberto
Morini, Silvia
Borderi, Marco
Viale, Pierluigi
Pasquinelli, Gianandrea
Pagliaro, Pasqualepaolo
Bagnara, Gian Paolo
Re, Maria Carla
author_facet Gibellini, Davide
Alviano, Francesco
Miserocchi, Anna
Tazzari, Pier Luigi
Ricci, Francesca
Clò, Alberto
Morini, Silvia
Borderi, Marco
Viale, Pierluigi
Pasquinelli, Gianandrea
Pagliaro, Pasqualepaolo
Bagnara, Gian Paolo
Re, Maria Carla
author_sort Gibellini, Davide
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: HIV infection elicits the onset of a progressive immunodeficiency and also damages several other organs and tissues such as the CNS, kidney, heart, blood vessels, adipose tissue and bone. In particular, HIV infection has been related to an increased incidence of cardiovascular diseases and derangement in the structure of blood vessels in the absence of classical risk factors. The recent characterization of multipotent mesenchymal cells in the vascular wall, involved in regulating cellular homeostasis, suggests that these cells may be considered a target of HIV pathogenesis. This paper investigated the interaction between HIV-1 and vascular wall resident human mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). RESULTS: MSCs were challenged with classical R5 and X4 HIV-1 laboratory strains demonstrating that these strains are able to enter and integrate their retro-transcribed proviral DNA in the host cell genome. Subsequent experiments indicated that HIV-1 strains and recombinant gp120 elicited a reliable increase in apoptosis in sub-confluent MSCs. Since vascular wall MSCs are multipotent cells that may be differentiated towards several cell lineages, we challenged HIV-1 strains and gp120 on MSCs differentiated to adipogenesis and endotheliogenesis. Our experiments showed that the adipogenesis is increased especially by upregulated PPARγ activity whereas the endothelial differentiation induced by VEGF treatment was impaired with a downregulation of endothelial markers such as vWF, Flt-1 and KDR expression. These viral effects in MSC survival and adipogenic or endothelial differentiation were tackled by CD4 blockade suggesting an important role of CD4/gp120 interaction in this context. CONCLUSIONS: The HIV-related derangement of MSC survival and differentiation may suggest a direct role of HIV infection and gp120 in impaired vessel homeostasis and in genesis of vessel damage observed in HIV-infected patients.
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spelling pubmed-31232742011-06-25 HIV-1 and recombinant gp120 affect the survival and differentiation of human vessel wall-derived mesenchymal stem cells Gibellini, Davide Alviano, Francesco Miserocchi, Anna Tazzari, Pier Luigi Ricci, Francesca Clò, Alberto Morini, Silvia Borderi, Marco Viale, Pierluigi Pasquinelli, Gianandrea Pagliaro, Pasqualepaolo Bagnara, Gian Paolo Re, Maria Carla Retrovirology Research BACKGROUND: HIV infection elicits the onset of a progressive immunodeficiency and also damages several other organs and tissues such as the CNS, kidney, heart, blood vessels, adipose tissue and bone. In particular, HIV infection has been related to an increased incidence of cardiovascular diseases and derangement in the structure of blood vessels in the absence of classical risk factors. The recent characterization of multipotent mesenchymal cells in the vascular wall, involved in regulating cellular homeostasis, suggests that these cells may be considered a target of HIV pathogenesis. This paper investigated the interaction between HIV-1 and vascular wall resident human mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). RESULTS: MSCs were challenged with classical R5 and X4 HIV-1 laboratory strains demonstrating that these strains are able to enter and integrate their retro-transcribed proviral DNA in the host cell genome. Subsequent experiments indicated that HIV-1 strains and recombinant gp120 elicited a reliable increase in apoptosis in sub-confluent MSCs. Since vascular wall MSCs are multipotent cells that may be differentiated towards several cell lineages, we challenged HIV-1 strains and gp120 on MSCs differentiated to adipogenesis and endotheliogenesis. Our experiments showed that the adipogenesis is increased especially by upregulated PPARγ activity whereas the endothelial differentiation induced by VEGF treatment was impaired with a downregulation of endothelial markers such as vWF, Flt-1 and KDR expression. These viral effects in MSC survival and adipogenic or endothelial differentiation were tackled by CD4 blockade suggesting an important role of CD4/gp120 interaction in this context. CONCLUSIONS: The HIV-related derangement of MSC survival and differentiation may suggest a direct role of HIV infection and gp120 in impaired vessel homeostasis and in genesis of vessel damage observed in HIV-infected patients. BioMed Central 2011-05-25 /pmc/articles/PMC3123274/ /pubmed/21612582 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-8-40 Text en Copyright ©2011 Gibellini et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Gibellini, Davide
Alviano, Francesco
Miserocchi, Anna
Tazzari, Pier Luigi
Ricci, Francesca
Clò, Alberto
Morini, Silvia
Borderi, Marco
Viale, Pierluigi
Pasquinelli, Gianandrea
Pagliaro, Pasqualepaolo
Bagnara, Gian Paolo
Re, Maria Carla
HIV-1 and recombinant gp120 affect the survival and differentiation of human vessel wall-derived mesenchymal stem cells
title HIV-1 and recombinant gp120 affect the survival and differentiation of human vessel wall-derived mesenchymal stem cells
title_full HIV-1 and recombinant gp120 affect the survival and differentiation of human vessel wall-derived mesenchymal stem cells
title_fullStr HIV-1 and recombinant gp120 affect the survival and differentiation of human vessel wall-derived mesenchymal stem cells
title_full_unstemmed HIV-1 and recombinant gp120 affect the survival and differentiation of human vessel wall-derived mesenchymal stem cells
title_short HIV-1 and recombinant gp120 affect the survival and differentiation of human vessel wall-derived mesenchymal stem cells
title_sort hiv-1 and recombinant gp120 affect the survival and differentiation of human vessel wall-derived mesenchymal stem cells
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3123274/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21612582
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-8-40
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