Abstract

Early-onset heart failure (HF) continues to be a major cause of morbidity and mortality in people living with human immunodeficiency virus type one (HIV-1) infection (PLWH), yet the molecular causes for this remain poorly understood. Herein NOD.Cg-PrkdcscidIl2rgtm1Wjl/SzJ humanized mice (Hu-mice), plasma from PLWH, and autopsied cardiac tissues from deceased HIV seropositive individuals were used to assess if there is a link between the glycolysis byproduct methylglyoxal (MG) and HF in the setting of HIV-1 infection. At five weeks post HIV infection, Hu-mice developed grade III-IV diastolic dysfunction (DD) with an associated two-fold increase in plasma MG. At sixteen-seventeen weeks post infection, cardiac ejection fraction and fractional shortening also declined by 26 and 35%, and plasma MG increased to four-fold higher than uninfected controls. Histopathological and biochemical analyses of cardiac tissues from Hu-mice 17 weeks post-infection affirmed MG increase with a concomitant decrease in expression of the MG-degrading enzyme glyoxalase-1 (Glo1). The endothelial cell marker CD31 was found to be lower, and coronary microvascular leakage and myocardial fibrosis were prominent. Increasing expression of Glo1 in Hu-mice five weeks post-infection using a single dose of an engineered AAV2/9 (1.7 × 1012 virion particles/kg), attenuated the increases in plasma and cardiac MG levels. Increasing Glo1 also blunted microvascular leakage, fibrosis, and HF seen at sixteen weeks post-infection, without changes in plasma viral loads. In plasma from virally suppressed PLWH, MG was also 3.7-fold higher. In autopsied cardiac tissues from seropositive, HIV individuals with low viral log, MG was 4.2-fold higher and Glo1 was 50% lower compared to uninfected controls. These data show for the first time a causal link between accumulation of MG and HF in the setting of HIV infection.

Highlights

  • Modern antiretroviral drug therapies (ART) have profoundly reduced morbidities and mortality in human immunodeficiency virus type one (HIV-1) infected individuals [1, 2]

  • We demonstrate for the first time that elevation of the cytotoxic glycolysis byproduct MG is an initiating cause for heart failure (HF) during HIV-1 infection

  • This conclusion is based on new findings obtained from infected humanized mice (Hu-mice), plasma from persons living with HIV-1 infection (PLWH) and autopsied cardiac tissues from deceased HIV-1

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Summary

Introduction

Modern antiretroviral drug therapies (ART) have profoundly reduced morbidities and mortality in human immunodeficiency virus type one (HIV-1) infected individuals [1, 2]. By contemporary estimates more than 40% of persons living with HIV-1 infection (PLWH) on long-term combination ART therapies are developing early-onset heart failure (HF) [3,4,5,6,7]. This disease which starts at least a decade earlier in PLWH compared to uninfected individuals and is independent of arteriosclerosis, and/or myocardial infarction. The effects of antiretroviral drugs, alcohol, and illicit drugs, and aging on cardiac function in the setting of HIV1 infection are limited, making delineation of mechanisms that trigger HF development in HIV-1 setting challenging

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