Suppression of neurocognitive damage in LP-BM5-infected mice with a targeted deletion of the TNF-alpha gene. NLM AIDSLINE Important note: Information in this article was accurate in 2000. The state of the art may have changed since the publication date.

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Suppression of neurocognitive damage in LP-BM5-infected mice with a targeted deletion of the TNF-alpha gene.

FASEB J. 2000 May;14(7):1023-31. Unique Identifier : AIDSLINE MED/20245485
Iida R; Saito K; Yamada K; Basile AS; Sekikawa K; Takemura M; Fujii H; Wada H; Seishima M; Nabeshima T; Department of Neuropsychopharmacology and Hospital Pharmacy,; Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya 466-8560,; Japan.


Abstract: Brain levels of TNF-alpha increase in many inflammatory conditions, including HIV-1 infection, and may contribute to neurodegenerative processes. The paucity of agents that can selectively and potently block TNF-alpha processing or its receptors has led us to investigate the role of TNF-alpha in chronic neurodegeneration associated with retroviral infection using mice with targeted deletions of the TNF-alpha gene. Infection of wild-type C57BL/6 mice with the LP-BM5 murine leukemia retrovirus mixture leads to the development of a severe immunodeficiency as well as cognitive deficits and neuronal damage. TNF-alpha-(-/-) mice infected with LP-BM5 developed a systemic immunopathology indistinguishable in severity from that observed in contemporaneously infected wild-type mice. In contrast, the performance of infected TNF-alpha-(-/-) mice in the Y-maze and Morris water maze was not different from that of uninfected TNF-alpha-(-/-) mice. The extent of glial activation in the striatum, as indicated by the increase in density of peripheral benzodiazepine receptors, was equivalent in both groups of LP-BM5-infected mice. However, the decrease in striatal MAP-2 expression, a marker of neurodegeneration observed in infected wild-type mice, was not found in infected TNF-alpha-(-/-) mice. While the loss of TNF-alpha appeared to have no effect on the course or severity of the central or peripheral immunopathology resulting from LP-BM5 infection, the behavioral and biochemical manifestations were substantially curtailed in the TNF-alpha-(-/-) mice. These findings directly support a role for TNF-alpha in the neurodegenerative processes associated with viral infections such as HIV-1.


Keywords: JOURNAL ARTICLE Animal CD4-CD8 Ratio *Gene Deletion Leukemia Viruses, Murine/*PHYSIOLOGY Maze Learning Mice Mice, Inbred C57BL Mice, Knockout Nervous System Diseases/GENETICS/*PREVENTION & CONTROL Retroviridae Infections/IMMUNOLOGY/*PHYSIOPATHOLOGY Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Tumor Necrosis Factor/*GENETICS

KWDjournalarticleanimalcd4-cd8ratioKWDgenedeletionleukemiaviruses,murine/KWDphysiologymazelearningmicemice,inbredc57blmice,knockoutnervoussystemdiseases/genetics/KWDprevention&controlretroviridaeinfections/immunology/KWDphysiopathologysupport,non-uKWDsKWDgov'ttumornecrosisfactor/KWDgenetics
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A0080976


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