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Characterization of platelet-monocyte complexes in HIV-1-infected individuals: possible role in HIV-associated neuroinflammation. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • HIV-1 infection leads to ongoing neuroinflammation in the brain, even with effective antiretroviral therapy, primarily due to activated monocytes and macrophages crossing the compromised blood-brain barrier.
  • Elevated soluble CD40 ligand in the plasma of HIV-1-infected individuals is linked to higher permeability of the blood-brain barrier and facilitates interactions between inflammatory monocytes and platelets, resulting in complex formations that can worsen cognitive impairment.
  • Targeting these platelet-monocyte complexes with antiplatelet medications may help reduce neuroinflammation and improve cognitive outcomes in individuals undergoing combined antiretroviral therapy for HIV-1.

Article Abstract

HIV-1-associated neuroinflammation persists even with effective combined antiretroviral therapy, and it is associated with the presence of activated monocytes/macrophages within the CNS. To infiltrate the CNS, monocytes transmigrate across the selectively permeable blood-brain barrier, which is compromised during HIV-1 infection. Interestingly, platelet-derived excess soluble CD40 ligand found in the plasma and cerebrospinal fluid of HIV-1-infected individuals with cognitive impairment has previously been implicated in increased blood-brain barrier permeability. In this study we show that soluble CD40 ligand also promotes the formation of complexes between inflammatory monocytes and activated platelets (PMCs), which are detected by flow cytometry as monocytes that express excess of CD61, a platelet marker, and that these complexes are increased in individuals with HIV-1 infection. PMCs exhibit an enhanced ability to adhere to human brain microvascular endothelial cells as compared with monocytes alone, and they migrate across the transendothelial barrier. These complexes can be found marginalized in the lumen of postcapillary venules in postmortem brain tissue derived from cases of HIV-1-associated encephalitis. The extravasation of monocytes across the brain endothelium may exacerbate neuroinflammation, indicating that enhancing this event via platelet interaction may be a contributing factor in the development of cognitive impairment. Thus, dampening platelet activation, and in turn PMC formation, with antiplatelet agents may prove beneficial in developing adjunctive therapies for use in combination with combined antiretroviral therapy in an effort to reduce HIV-1-associated neurologic deficit.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4011982PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1302318DOI Listing

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