| Literature DB >> 33162998 |
Michellie Thurman1, Samuel Johnson1, Arpan Acharya1, Suresh Pallikkuth2, Mohan Mahesh3, Siddappa N Byrareddy1.
Abstract
With advancement, prompt use, and increasing accessibility of antiretroviral therapy, people with HIV are living longer and have comparable lifespans to those negative for HIV. However, people living with HIV experience tradeoffs with quality of life often developing age-associated co-morbid conditions such as cancers, cardiovascular diseases, or neurodegeneration due to chronic immune activation and inflammation. This creates a discrepancy in chronological and physiological age, with HIV-infected individuals appearing older than they are, and in some contexts ART-associated toxicity exacerbates this gap. The complexity of the accelerated aging process in the context of HIV-infection highlights the need for greater understanding of biomarkers involved. In this review, we discuss markers identified in different anatomical sites of the body including periphery, brain, and gut, as well as markers related to DNA that may serve as reliable predictors of accelerated aging in HIV infected individuals as it relates to inflammatory state and immune activation.Entities:
Keywords: HIV; activation markers; combined antiretroviral therapy ; immune aging; inflammatory markers
Year: 2020 PMID: 33162998 PMCID: PMC7581935 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.583934
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Diagram showing biomarkers isolated from various anatomical sites of the body that are altered by HIV-infection and likely contribute to accelerated aging observed in people living with HIV (PLWH) on cART through chronic immune activation and inflammation. (A) Typically, gut-associated bacteria, Firmicutes, produces butyrate which inhibits HDAC1. With normal aging or HIV-infection, Firmicutes is replaced causing reduced production of butyrate and consequently increased expression of HDAC1, which acts to increase HIV transcription. (B) Pannex-1 channels, usually closed, open upon binding of HIV to receptors CD4 and co-receptor CCR5, which causes release of ATP, an inflammatory signal. Increased levels of ATP in circulation were correlated with cognitive impairment and thus predictive of CNS compromise. (C) During HIV-infection plasma levels of monocyte activation markers sCD163 and sCD14, as well as pro-inflammatory marker IP-10 are elevated and inversely related with CD4+ T-cell depletion. Over-expression of these markers in the periphery leads to accelerated aging of T cells and senescence. (D) Upon HIV-infection, secretion of exosomes increases along with oxidative stress markers, and HIV-induced chronic activation alters the contents of exosomes. Notch-4 exosomal levels are elevated and correlated with other activation markers, HLA-DR. (E) HIV-infection reduces expression of circulating TRAIL, an apoptosis-inducing protein, which theoretically in turn limits apoptosis of CD4+ T-cell reservoirs allowing for persistent immune activation and inflammation. (F) Telomeres undergo attrition after HIV-infection due to reduced T-cell proliferation and this is associated with cellular senescence markers CD8+, HLA-DR, and CD38+.
Effects of natural versus HIV-induced aging on soluble biomarkers and known age-associated diseases*.
| Biomarker | Function | System | Effect of HIV infection | Effect of Aging | Age-associated diseases | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| sCD14 | Myeloid differentiation marker on monocytes/macrophages; | Periphery | Increased | Increased | Cardiovascular Disease | ( |
| sCD163 | Shed by CD163 scavenger receptor specific to monocytes/macrophages; | Periphery | Increased | Increased | Cardiovascular Disease, Liver Disease | ( |
| IP-10 | Pro-inflammatory chemokine involved in T-cell generation and trafficking | Periphery | Increased | Increased | Rheumatoid Arthritis | ( |
| NDE | Delivers signaling molecules between cells and reflects host cell proteins and nucleic acids | Brain – isolated from blood | Increased | ? | Alzheimer’s Disease | ( |
| Notch-4 | Regulates cell-fate determination, differentiation, proliferation, apoptotic programs | Plasma exosome contents | Increased | Decreased | Alzheimer’s Disease | ( |
| SLAMF1 | Glycoprotein that delivers downstream signals directing innate and adaptive immune response; Phagocytic properties | Periphery | Increased | Increased | Rheumatoid arthritis, Alzheimer’s Disease | ( |
| CCL23 | Hematopoiesis inhibitor that directs migration of monocytes, macrophages, activated T-lymphocytes | Periphery | Increased | ? | Rheumatoid arthritis, human brain injury, Myeloid leukemia | ( |
| NT3 | Supports differentiation of neurons to promote growth | Periphery | Decreased | Decreased | Colorectal Cancer; Neurocognitive decline | ( |
| TRAIL | Induces apoptosis of tumor/infected cells; promotes CD4+ T-cell death in HIV | Periphery | Decreased | Increased | Alzheimer’s Disease | ( |
| p53 | Tumor suppressor, DNA repair, cell cycle regulation | Periphery | Increased | Increased | Cancer | ( |
| p16 | Tumor suppressor, cell cycle regulation, neurogenesis regulation | Periphery, CNS | Increased | Increased | Cancer, neurodegeneration | ( |
| Neopterin | Pteridine metabolite produced primarily during Th1-type | CNS, periphery | Increased | Increased | Chronic inflammation, neurocognitive decline | ( |
| NFL | Maintains neuronal shape, including axonal diameter | CNS | Increased | Increased | Neurodegeneration (Specifically axon injury) | ( |
| sCD30 | Tumor necrosis factor receptor | CNS, Periphery | Increased | Increased | Cancer, Inflammation, neurodegeneration | ( |
| Serum ATP | Energy transfer, signaling, neurotransmitter | From CNS to periphery | Case-dependent increase | Case-dependent increase | Neurodegeneration | ( |
| S100B | Cell cycle regulation, neuron survival, inflammatory response | CNS, gut, periphery | Increased | Variable (“Dose dependent”) | Neurodegeneration, cancer, inflammatory bowel disease | ( |
| Grey/White Matter Volume | Processing, integrating, and coordinating information | CNS | Decreased | Decreased | Neurodegeneration | ( |
| Ventricle Volume | Storage and transport CSF | CNS | Increased | Increased | Neurodegeneration | ( |
| Choline | Cell membrane degradation and inflammation | CNS | Increased | Increased | Neurodegeneration | ( |
| Myo-Inositol | Gliosis and neuroinflammation | CNS | Increased | Increased | Neurodegeneration | ( |
| N-acetyl Aspartate | Neuron viability and integrity | CNS | Decreased | Decreased | Neurodegeneration | ( |
| Mean Diffusivity | Measure of water flow and loss of myelin | CNS | Increased | Increased | Neurodegeneration | ( |
| Fractional Anisotropy | Measure of myelin structure and axon integrity | CNS | Decreased | Decreased | Neurodegeneration | ( |
| Ratio of Firmicutes to Bacterioidetes | Butyrate production | Micro-biome | Decreased | Decreased | Inflammation, Neurodegeneration, | ( |
*Many of these biomarkers may be used to track HIV pathogenesis as well as changes in inflammatory state with chronological aging,