Hepatitis C virus (HCV) coinfection is common in human immunodeficiency virus type I (HIV-1) infected subjects. Epidemiological data suggest that in HIV-1 and HCV coinfected patients, HCV infection is more severe and progression to AIDS is more rapid. Furthermore, HIV infection was reported to facilitate mother-to-infant transmission of HCV and also HCV infection was reported to facilitate mother-to-infant transmission of HIV. Our overall hypothesis is that HCV replicates in lymphoid cells and that this phenomenon is responsible for the observed interactions between HIV-1 and HCV infections. Using strand-specific assays, we have demonstrated the presence of HCV RNA negative strand, which is a viral replicative intermediary, in multiple extrahepatic sites, but particularly common in lymphoid tissue. This infection was mainly localized in monocyte/macrophage cells. Moreover, we found that viral sequences at extrahepatic replication sites commonly differ from circulating and liver-derived sequences. Our proposal aims to further characterize extrahepatic HCV replication among HIV-1-infected subjects. Furthermore, we will analyze the presence of HCV replication in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) and cervical lavage cells in a large group of HIV-1-positive mothers and we will correlate these data with transmission of HCV and HIV-1 into children. To determine whether macrophage-derived HCV strains are responsible for viral transmission into children, we will analyze viral quasispecies composition in serum and PBMCs from mothers and children and in cervical lavage cells from mothers. We will also determine whether HCV infection of antigen presenting cells affects their function. Accordingly, we will culture dendritic cells from HCV-infected and uninfected individuals and compare them in functional assays in vitro. In summary, our studies will further characterize extrahepatic replication of HCV in HIV-1 infected subjects and will elucidate its role in mother-to-infant transmission of these two viruses.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01DA013760-03
Application #
6523173
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZDA1-KXN-G (16))
Program Officer
Davenny, Katherine
Project Start
2000-09-30
Project End
2004-08-31
Budget Start
2002-09-01
Budget End
2004-08-31
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2002
Total Cost
$344,250
Indirect Cost
Name
Mayo Clinic, Arizona
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
Scottsdale
State
AZ
Country
United States
Zip Code
85259
Nowicki, Marek J; Vigen, Cheryl; Mack, Wendy J et al. (2008) Association of cells with natural killer (NK) and NKT immunophenotype with incident cancers in HIV-infected women. AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 24:163-8
Nowicki, Marek J; Laskus, Tomasz; Nikolopoulou, Georgia et al. (2005) Presence of hepatitis C virus (HCV) RNA in the genital tracts of HCV/HIV-1-coinfected women. J Infect Dis 192:1557-65
Nikolopoulou, Georgia B; Nowicki, Marek J; Du, Wenbo et al. (2005) HCV viremia is associated with drug use in young HIV-1 and HCV coinfected pregnant and non-pregnant women. Addiction 100:626-35
Adair, Debra M; Radkowski, Marek; Jablonska, Joanna et al. (2005) Differential display analysis of gene expression in brains from hepatitis C-infected patients. AIDS 19 Suppl 3:S145-50
Radkowski, Marek; Bednarska, Agnieszka; Horban, Andrzej et al. (2004) Infection of primary human macrophages with hepatitis C virus in vitro: induction of tumour necrosis factor-alpha and interleukin 8. J Gen Virol 85:47-59
Laskus, Tomasz; Radkowski, Marek; Jablonska, Joanna et al. (2004) Human immunodeficiency virus facilitates infection/replication of hepatitis C virus in native human macrophages. Blood 103:3854-9
Rodriguez-Luna, Hector; Khatib, Amer; Sharma, Pratima et al. (2004) Treatment of recurrent hepatitis C infection after liver transplantation with combination of pegylated interferon alpha2b and ribavirin: an open-label series. Transplantation 77:190-4
Arenas, Juan I; Gallegos-Orozco, Juan F; Laskus, Tomasz et al. (2004) Hepatitis C virus quasi-species dynamics predict progression of fibrosis after liver transplantation. J Infect Dis 189:2037-46
Chopra, Kapil B; Demetris, Anthony J; Blakolmer, Karen et al. (2003) Progression of liver fibrosis in patients with chronic hepatitis C after orthotopic liver transplantation. Transplantation 76:1487-91
Radkowski, Marek; Wilkinson, Jeffrey; Nowicki, Marek et al. (2002) Search for hepatitis C virus negative-strand RNA sequences and analysis of viral sequences in the central nervous system: evidence of replication. J Virol 76:600-8

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