AI Article Synopsis

  • Few preclinical studies have examined how different medications for opiate addiction affect neurotoxicity related to HIV-1 Tat in neuronal and glial co-cultures.
  • Exposure to Tat combined with morphine, methadone, or buprenorphine at 500 nM significantly increased neurotoxicity beyond that of Tat alone, while buprenorphine showed neurotoxic effects even at lower concentrations and demonstrated both neurotoxic and neuroprotective properties.
  • The study found that while all drugs elevated glial calcium levels when combined with Tat, they varied in their effects on neuroinflammation and toxicity, with buprenorphine potentially offering unique benefits due to its pharmacological profile at different opioid receptors.

Article Abstract

Few preclinical studies have compared the relative therapeutic efficacy of medications used to treat opiate addiction in relation to neuroAIDS. Here we compare the ability of methadone and buprenorphine, and the prototypic opiate morphine, to potentiate the neurotoxic and proinflammatory ([Ca²⁺]i, ROS, H₂O₂, chemokines) effects of HIV-1 Tat in neuronal and/or mixed-glial co-cultures. Repeated observations of neurons during 48 h exposure to combinations of Tat, equimolar concentrations (500 nM) of morphine, methadone, or buprenorphine exacerbated neurotoxicity significantly above levels seen with Tat alone. Buprenorphine alone displayed marked neurotoxicity at 500 nM, prompting additional studies of its neurotoxic effects at 5 nM and 50 nM concentrations ± Tat. In combination with Tat, buprenorphine displayed paradoxical, concentration-dependent, neurotoxic and neuroprotective actions. Buprenorphine neurotoxicity coincided with marked elevations in [Ca²⁺]i, but not increases in glial ROS or chemokine release. Tat by itself elevated the production of CCL5/RANTES, CCL4/MIP-1β, and CCL2/MCP-1. Methadone and buprenorphine alone had no effect, but methadone interacted with Tat to further increase production of CCL5/RANTES. In combination with Tat, all drugs significantly increased glial [Ca²⁺]i, but ROS was only significantly increased by co-exposure with morphine. Taken together, the increases in glial [Ca²⁺]i, ROS, and neuroinflammatory chemokines were not especially accurate predictors of neurotoxicity. Despite similarities, opiates displayed differences in their neurotoxic and neuroinflammatory interactions with Tat. Buprenorphine, in particular, was partially neuroprotective at a low concentration, which may result from its unique pharmacological profile at multiple opioid receptors. Overall, the results reveal differences among addiction medications that may impact neuroAIDS.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4475822PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/1570162x1206150311161147DOI Listing

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