Pericardial effusion, cardiomyopathy, and left ventricular dysfunction are prevalent in patients with AIDS. The applicants' model of murine retrovirus infection mimics much of the immune dysfunction and cardiac toxicity found during HIV infection. They expect that cytokine dysregulation and increased oxidative stress in the mouse heart due to murine retrovirus infection will increase the formation of NfkB expression resulting in of ICAM-1 and T-helper cell hyperactivtion and secretion of cytokines. This cascade will stimulate PMN and endothelial cell activation and promote the formation of iNOS, resulting in cardiac muscle and endothelial cell damage and ventricular dysfunction. They will perform molecular analysis of NfkB translocation to the nucleus. They will measure simultaneously the resulting RNA message and proteins for iNOS or ICAM-1 in heart tissues. The left ventricular function will be quantitated in vivo with pressure volume loop to define the ventricular dysfunction and characterize the therapeutic effect of immunomodulators. They propose to examine the PMN-mediated tissue injury hypothesis in the heart and coronary vasculative. They will investigate PMN sequestration and activation in the heart and test for oxidative damage. They will correlate the retroviral progression to the coronary microvascular injury through intravital microscopy, PMN accumulation and PMN function. They will limit the deleterious cardiac effects during retrovial infection by preventing dysfunctional cytokine production, slowing the resulting immune dysregulation and increased oxidative damage. They will examine the efficacy of their proven methods that prevented much of the cytokine dysregulation and oxidative damage to the heart: T-cell receptor Vbeta 8.1 injection, vitamin E supplementation, and interferon-gamma or anti IL-4 antisera injection. They will also accentuate cytokine dysregulation by IL-4 injection to accelerate immune dysfunction and cardiopathology. These model studies will increase understanding of retrovirus induced immune dysfunction and its role in cardiac pathology. The treatments that found to prevent cytokine dysregulation and cardiotoxicitiy in retrovirally infected mice will then be applicable to reducing heart disease in HIV infected patients

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01HL059794-02
Application #
2796820
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZHL1-CSR-K (S1))
Project Start
1997-09-30
Project End
2002-09-29
Budget Start
1998-09-30
Budget End
1999-09-29
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
1998
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Arizona
Department
Type
Organized Research Units
DUNS #
City
Tucson
State
AZ
Country
United States
Zip Code
85721
Yang, Bo; Larson, Douglas F; Watson, Ronald R (2004) Modulation of iNOS activity in age-related cardiac dysfunction. Life Sci 75:655-67
Sepulveda, Ramon Tomas; Marchalonis, John Jacob; Watson, Ronald Ross (2003) T-cell receptor V beta 8.1 peptide reduces coxsackievirus-induced cardiopathology during murine acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. J Cardiovasc Pharmacol 41:489-97
Chen, Yinhong; Davis-Gorman, Grace; Watson, Ronald R et al. (2003) Platelet CD62p expression and microparticle in murine acquired immune deficiency syndrome and chronic ethanol consumption. Alcohol Alcohol 38:25-30
Yu, Qianli; Larson, Douglas F; Watson, Ronald R (2003) Heart disease, methamphetamine and AIDS. Life Sci 73:129-40
Chen, Yinhong; Mendoza, Sam; Davis-Gorman, Grace et al. (2003) Neutrophil activation by murine retroviral infection during chronic ethanol consumption. Alcohol Alcohol 38:109-14
Chen, Yinhong; Davis-Gorman, Grace; Watson, Ronald R et al. (2003) Chronic ethanol consumption modulates myocardial ischaemia-reperfusion injury in murine AIDS. Alcohol Alcohol 38:18-24
Sepulveda, R Tomas; Zhang, Jin; Watson, Ronald R (2002) Selenium supplementation decreases coxsackievirus heart disease during murine AIDS. Cardiovasc Toxicol 2:53-61
Sepulveda, R Tomas; Jiang, Shuguang; Besselsen, David G et al. (2002) Alcohol consumption during murine acquired immunodeficiency syndrome accentuates heart pathology due to coxsackievirus. Alcohol Alcohol 37:157-63
Chen, Yinhong; Davis-Gorman, Grace; Watson, Ronald Ross et al. (2002) Vitamin E attenuates myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury in murine AIDS. Cardiovasc Toxicol 2:119-27
Lopez, M C; Huang, D S; Watson, R R (2002) Changes in mesenteric lymph node T cell phenotype and B and T cell homing properties after murine AIDS infection. Lymphology 35:76-86

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