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Merck
  • Cocaine exposure enhances permissiveness of quiescent T cells to HIV infection.

Cocaine exposure enhances permissiveness of quiescent T cells to HIV infection.

Journal of leukocyte biology (2013-07-03)
Sohn G Kim, James B Jung, Dhaval Dixit, Robert Rovner, Jerome A Zack, Gayle C Baldwin, Dimitrios N Vatakis
摘要

In vivo and in vitro exposure to stimulants has been associated with increased levels of HIV infection in PBMCs. Among these lymphocyte subsets, quiescent CD4(+) T cells make up the majority of circulating T cells in the blood. Others and we have demonstrated that HIV infects this population of cells inefficiently. However, minor changes in their cell state can render them permissive to infection, significantly impacting the viral reservoir. We have hypothesized that stimulants, such as cocaine, may perturb the activation state of quiescent cells enhancing permissiveness to infection. Quiescent T cells isolated from healthy human donors were exposed to cocaine and infected with HIV. Samples were harvested at different time-points to assess the impact of cocaine on their susceptibility to infection at various stages of the HIV life cycle. Our data show that a 3-day exposure to cocaine enhanced infection of quiescent cells, an effect that appears to be mediated by σ1R and D4R. Overall, our results indicate that cocaine-mediated effects on quiescent T cells may increase the pool of infection-susceptible T cells. The latter underscores the impact that stimulants have on HIV-seropositive individuals and the challenges posed for treatment.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-DRD4 Antibody, clone 2B9, clone 2B9, from mouse
Sigma-Aldrich
Anti-Sigma IR Antibody, clone ICR-SIG1R-A, clone ICR-SIG1R-A, from rat