Neurological disorders during HIV-1 infection correlate with viral load in cerebrospinal fluid but not with virus phenotype
- 1 May 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in AIDS
- Vol. 12 (7) , 737-743
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00002030-199807000-00010
Abstract
To verify the compartmentalization of HIV-1 within the central nervous system (CNS) and to define whether viral phenotype of HIV-1 isolates from cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples and CSF viral load correlate with the presence and type of neurological disorders. A total of 33 HIV-1-infected patients with and without neurological disorders were included in the study. HIV-1 isolation from paired CSF and peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) samples was attempted by a standard cocultivation technique; the biological phenotype of HIV-1 isolates was assessed by the MT-2 cell assay. CSF and plasma HIV-RNA levels were measured by a quantitative reverse transcripase–polymerase chain reaction. The rate of HIV-1 isolation from CSF and PBMC was 66% (22 isolates) and 85% (28 isolates), respectively. Seventeen out of 22 (77%) CSF HIV-1 isolates were characterized as non-syncytium-inducing, and 15 out of 28 (68%) isolates from PBMC were typed as syncytium-inducing (SI). The presence of SI isolates in CSF was limited to patients with HIV-1-, cytomegalovirus- or JC virus-related disorders and was often associated with high levels of HIV-1 RNA in the CSF. Our results demonstrate a correlation between high levels of HIV RNA in CSF and the presence of neurological disorders thus indicating a possible role for HIV-1 RNA in the CSF as a biological marker of neurological disease. The finding of viruses with a different phenotype in paired CSF and PBMC indicates that HIV-1 may evolve differently in the brain and in the blood. This suggests compartmentalization of HIV-1 within the CNS.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Expression of HIV regulatory and structural mRNA in the central nervous systemAIDS, 1996
- HIV-1 RNA levels and the development of clinical diseaseAIDS, 1996
- Analysis of ENV V3 sequences from HIV-1-infected brain indicates restrained virus expression throughout the diseaseJournal of Medical Virology, 1996
- Human T lymphotropic virus, type-I myelopathyCurrent Opinion in Neurology, 1995
- The Biological Phenotype of HIV-1 Is Usually Retained during and after Sexual TransmissionVirology, 1994
- Brain Viral Burden in HIV InfectionJournal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology, 1994
- PCR identification of HIV‐1 DNA sequences in brain tissue of patients with AIDS encephalopathyNeurology, 1993
- HIV-1 biological phenotype in long-term infected individuals evaluated with an MT-2 cocultivation assayAIDS, 1992
- Toxoplasmic encephalitisAIDS, 1990
- HTLV-III Infection in Brains of Children and Adults with AIDS EncephalopathyScience, 1985