| Literature DB >> 33869183 |
Supriya D Mahajan1, Nigel Smith Ordain1, Hilliard Kutscher1,2,3, Shanta Karki1, Jessica L Reynolds1.
Abstract
Fifty to sixty percent of HIV-1 positive patients experience HIV-1 associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND) likely due to persistent inflammation and blood-brain barrier (BBB) dysfunction. The role that microglia and astrocytes play in HAND pathogenesis has been well delineated; however, the role of exosomes in HIV neuroinflammation and neuropathogenesis is unclear. Exosomes are 50-150 nm phospholipid bilayer membrane vesicles that are responsible for cell-to-cell communication, cellular signal transduction, and cellular transport. Due to their diverse intracellular content, exosomes, are well poised to provide insight into HIV neuroinflammation as well as provide for diagnostic and predictive information that will greatly enhance the development of new therapeutic interventions for neuroinflammation. Exosomes are also uniquely positioned to be vehicles to delivery therapeutics across the BBB to modulate HIV neuroinflammation. This mini-review will briefly discuss what is known about exosome signaling in the context of HIV in the central nervous system (CNS), their potential for biomarkers as well as their potential for vehicles to deliver various therapeutics to treat HIV neuroinflammation.Entities:
Keywords: HIV neuroinflammation; blood-brain barrier; delivery; exosomes; signaling
Year: 2021 PMID: 33869183 PMCID: PMC8047197 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2021.637192
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
(A) Potential Biomarkers of HAND; (B) potential biomarkers in males and females with mild impairment.
| A. Potential biomarkers of HAND | ||
| Category/function | Proteins | Citations |
| Example of some proteins in exosome fractions that were higher in HIV + subjects with HAND compared to those without HAND | ||
| Inflammatory/immune response | Annexins, C-reactive protein, enolase, human leukocyte antigen (HLA), | |
| Stress response proteins | Parkinsonism associated deglycase Peroxiredoxins, alpha-synuclein, synuclein, vimentins | |
| Neuronal | Cell adhesion, ankyrin-binding protein, Neuroplastin, Neurexins | |
| Astrocyte proteins | Aldehyde dehydrogenase, glial fibrillary acidic | |
| Choroid plexus protein | ATPase Na + /K + transporting subunit alpha 2, ATP synthase, H + transporting, mitochondrial F1 complex, beta polypeptide | |
| Example of proteins from NDE from women with mild impairment that were significantly decreased | ||
| Lysosomal cysteine protease | Cathepsin S | |
| Microtubule-associated protein | Total tau | |
| Cell recognition and cell–cell adhesion | Neuronal cell adhesion molecule | |
| Cell adhesion molecule | Contactin-5 | |
| Example of proteins from NDE that were increased from cognitively impaired men | ||
| Blood coagulation/fibrinolysis, inflammation | Carboxypeptidase M | |
| Calcium-dependent cell adhesion proteins | Cadherin 3 | |
| Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress-inducible neurotrophic factor. | Mesencephalic astrocyte-derived neurotropic factor | |
Select examples of drug delivery to the CNS.
| Source of exosomes | Therapeutic | Citations |
| Bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells | miR-124 | |
| miR-133b+ mesenchymal stem cells | miR-133b | |
| Plasma | Quercetin | |
| Dendritic cell | GADPH siRNA | |
| Macrophage | Catalase | |
| Blood | Dopamine | |
| U-87 | Paclitaxel | |
| Glioblastoma cells | miR-21 | |
FIGURE 1Blood–brain barrier model demonstrating proof of concept of exosome delivery of Tspan2 across the BBB to latently infected microglia on the brain side. Schematic adapted from Reynolds and Mahajan (2020).