| Literature DB >> 30577804 |
Benjamin J Patters1, Santosh Kumar2.
Abstract
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection, despite great advances in antiretroviral therapy, remains a lifelong affliction. Though current treatment regimens can effectively suppress viral load to undetectable levels and preserve healthy immune function, they cannot fully alleviate all symptoms caused by the presence of the virus, such as HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders. Exosomes are small vesicles that transport cellular proteins, RNA, and small molecules between cells as a mechanism of intercellular communication. Recent research has shown that HIV proteins and RNA can be packaged into exosomes and transported between cells, to pathogenic effect. This review summarizes the current knowledge on the diverse mechanisms involved in the sorting of viral elements into exosomes and the damage those exosomal agents can inflict. In addition, potential therapeutic options to counteract exosome-mediated HIV pathogenesis are reviewed and considered.Entities:
Keywords: ESCRT; Exosome; HAND; HIV; Tetraspanin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30577804 PMCID: PMC6303896 DOI: 10.1186/s12977-018-0462-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Retrovirology ISSN: 1742-4690 Impact factor: 4.602
HIV elements packaged within exosomes and their effects
| HIV element | Source | Effect | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nef protein | Plasma | Enhanced amyloid beta secretion | Khan et al. [ |
| Activation-induced T-cell death | Raymond et al. [ | ||
| T-cells | Activation-induced T-cell death | Lenassi et al. [ | |
| Konadu et al. [ | |||
| Viral reactivation from latency | Arenaccio et al. [ | ||
| Arenaccio et al. [ | |||
| n/a | Muratori et al. [ | ||
| MDMs | Inflammatory cytokine production | Arenaccio et al. [ | |
| Microglia | Reduced BBB integrity | Raymond et al. [ | |
| Astrocytes | n/a | Pužar Dominkuš et al. [ | |
| Transfected HeLa cells | Activation-induced T-cell death | Lenassi et al. [ | |
| Transfected HEK cells | Activation-induced T-cell death | Raymond et al. [ | |
| n/a | Campbell et al. [ | ||
| Tat protein | T-cells | Activation of viral promoter | Rahimian and He [ |
| Astrocytes | Activation of viral promoter | Ibid. | |
| Neurite shortening and neurotoxicity | Ibid. | ||
| Transfected HEK cells | Activation of viral promoter | Ibid. | |
| Gag protein | MDMs | Enhanced infection | Kadiu et al. [ |
| T-cells | n/a | Narayanan et al. [ | |
| Env protein | T-cells | n/a | Ibid. |
| n/a | Enhanced infection | Arakelyan et al. [ | |
| TAR RNA | Plasma | Enhanced infection | Narayanan et al. [ |
| T-cells | Protection against extrinsic apoptosis | Ibid. | |
| Inflammatory cytokine production | Sampey et al. [ | ||
| n/a | Barclay et al. [ | ||
| MDMs | Inflammatory cytokine production | Sampey et al. [ | |
| Microglia | n/a | Barclay et al. [ | |
| Viral miRNAs | MDMs | Inflammatory cytokine production | Bernard et al. [ |
Fig. 1Mechanisms of exosome-mediated HIV pathogenesis. In vitro and ex vivo research has uncovered multiple mechanisms by which exosomal transport of viral proteins and RNA can cause deleterious effects in both infected and uninfected recipient cells. Aβ amyloid beta, AICD activation-induced cell death, BBB blood–brain barrier
Fig. 2Packaging of HIV elements within exosomes despite ART. Modern ART combats multiple stages of the retroviral life cycle, however no current antiretroviral drug blocks the expression of HIV proteins and RNA from integrated viral DNA, or their subsequent sorting into exosomes and secretion from infected cells