E2F1 localizes predominantly to neuronal cytoplasm and fails to induce expression of its transcriptional targets in human immunodeficiency virus-induced neuronal damage
Cerebral Cortex
Neurons
Transcriptional Activation
Cytoplasm
0303 health sciences
AIDS Dementia Complex
Macrophages
HIV
Apoptosis
Cyclin A
Rats
3. Good health
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
Tetrahydrofolate Dehydrogenase
03 medical and health sciences
Caspases
Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen
Tumor Suppressor Protein p14ARF
Animals
Humans
Cells, Cultured
E2F1 Transcription Factor
Cell Proliferation
DOI:
10.1016/j.neulet.2010.05.032
Publication Date:
2010-05-18T05:21:27Z
AUTHORS (6)
ABSTRACT
As human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) does not induce neuronal damage by direct infection, the mechanisms of neuronal damage or loss in HIV-associated dementia (HAD) remain unclear. We have shown previously that immunoreactivity of transcription factor, E2F1, increases in neurons, localizing predominantly to the cytoplasm, in HIV-associated pathologies. Here we confirm that E2F1 localization is predominantly cytoplasmic in primary postmitotic neurons in vitro and cortical neurons in vivo. To determine whether E2F1 contributes to neuronal death in HAD via transactivation of target promoters, we assessed the mRNA and protein levels of several classical E2F1 transcriptional targets implicated in cell cycle progression and apoptosis in an in vitro model of HIV-induced neurotoxicity and in cortical autopsy tissue from patients infected with HIV. By Q-PCR, we show that mRNA levels of E2F1 transcriptional targets implicated in cell cycle progression (E2F1, Cyclin A, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), and dyhydrofolate reductase (DHFR)) and apoptosis (caspases 3, 8, 9 and p19(ARF)) remain unchanged in an in vitro model of HIV-induced neurotoxicity. Further, we show that protein levels of p19(ARF), Cyclin A, and PCNA are not altered in vitro or in the cortex of patients with HAD. We propose that the predominantly cytoplasmic localization of E2F1 in neurons may account for the lack of E2F1 target transactivation in neurons responding to HIV-induced neurotoxicity.
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