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Bela F. Asztalos, Zahedi Mujawar, Matthew P. Morrow, Angela Grant, Tatiana Pushkarsky, Christine Wanke, Richard Shannon, Matthias Geyer, Frank Kirchhoff, Dmitri Sviridov, Michael L. Fitzgerald, Michael Bukrinsky, Keith G. Mansfield, Circulating Nef Induces Dyslipidemia in Simian Immunodeficiency Virus-Infected Macaques by Suppressing Cholesterol Efflux, The Journal of Infectious Diseases, Volume 202, Issue 4, 15 August 2010, Pages 614–623, https://doi.org/10.1086/654817
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Abstract
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and subsequent antiretroviral therapy have been associated with an increased incidence of dyslipidemia and cardiovascular disease and has been shown to suppress cholesterol efflux from virus-infected macrophages by inducing Nef-dependent down-regulation of adenosine triphosphate-binding cassette transporter A1 (ABCA1). Here, the simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV)-infected macaque model was used to examine the consequences and mechanisms involved. SIV infection drove a significant remodeling of high-density lipoprotein profiles, suggesting that systemic inhibition of the ABCA1-dependent reverse cholesterol transport pathway occurred. The ABCA1 cholesterol transporter was significantly down-regulated in the livers of the SIV-infected macaques, and the viral protein Nef could be detected in the livers as well as in the plasma of infected animals. Extracellular myristoylated HIV Nef inhibited cholesterol efflux from macrophages and hepatocytes. Moreover, serum samples from SIV-infected macaques also suppressed cholesterol efflux in a Nef-dependent fashion. These results indicate that SIV infection is a significant contributor to primary dyslipidemia, likely through the ability of Nef to suppress ABCA1-dependent reverse cholesterol transport.
- adenosine
- dyslipidemias
- hiv
- cardiovascular diseases
- cholesterol
- high density lipoproteins
- down-regulation
- hepatocytes
- immunologic deficiency syndromes
- macaca
- macrophages
- membrane transport proteins
- plasma
- simian immunodeficiency virus
- viral proteins
- infections
- liver
- viruses
- cholesterol transport
- anti-retroviral agents
- serum specimen
- abca1 gene