Effect of Methamphetamine and/or HIV on Human iPSCs-derived microglia and Neuron

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R21 · $198,125 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Abstract METH, a potent addictive psychostimulant, is one of the most commonly abused drugs in the United States. METH abuse is highly prevalent in HIV-infected individuals, which presents unique challenges for HIV prevention and treatment. Given the overlap impact of METH use and HIV on neuronal damage in the CNS, it becomes urgent to understand the role of interplays between METH and HIV in the pathogenesis of HIV- associated neurocognitive disorders (HAND). However, studies of HAND have been hampered by difficulties in collecting primary microglial and neuronal cells from autopsy or biopsy of HIV patients. Recent success in generating microglia and neurons from human induced pluripotent stem cell lines (iPSCs) now offers a great opportunity to study the direct interactions between HIV-infected microglia and neurons. The proposed studies will use iPSC-derived microglia (iPSC-MG) and neuron (iPSC-N) to examine our overall hypothesis that METH and/or HIV inhibit the intracellular HIV restriction factors and induce the inflammasomes and neurotoxic miRNAs in iPSC-MG, which facilitate HIV infection/replication in iPSC-MG and promote the death of iPSC-N. We propose two specific aims to address this hypothesis: Aim 1 To determine whether METH enhances HIV infection/replication in iPSC-MG. Mechanistically, we will examine whether METH and/or HIV inhibit the intracellular HIV restriction factors in iPSC-MG; Aim 2 To determine whether METH and/or HIV infection induce expression of the inflammasomes and neurotoxic miRNAs in iPSC-MG and promote the death of IPSC-N. This project fits well to the NIDA’s recent interests in studying the impact of drug abuse and/or HIV on human iPSC-derived CNS cells. The information resulting from the proposed studies using the iPSC-MG and iPSC-N will provide important insights on how the interplays of two major pathologic factors (HIV and METH) in the CNS compromise the intracellular anti-HIV immunity of microglia and induce neuronal death, which are the key mechanisms for HIV infection/persistence in the brain and development of HAND.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10210377
Project number
5R21DA051396-02
Recipient
TEMPLE UNIV OF THE COMMONWEALTH
Principal Investigator
WENZHE HO
Activity code
R21
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2021
Award amount
$198,125
Award type
5
Project period
2020-07-15 → 2023-06-30