Abstract

BackgroundFractalkine/CX3CL1 and its cognate receptor CX3CR1 are abundantly expressed in the CNS. Fractalkine is an unusual C-X3-C motif chemokine that is important in neuron-microglial communication, a co-receptor for HIV infection, and can be neuroprotective. To assess the effects of fractalkine on opiate-HIV interactive neurotoxicity, wild-type murine striatal neurons were co-cultured with mixed glia from the striata of wild-type or Cx3cr1 knockout mice ± HIV-1 Tat and/or morphine. Time-lapse digital images were continuously recorded at 20 min intervals for up to 72 h using computer-aided microscopy to track the same cells repeatedly.ResultsCo-exposure to Tat and morphine caused synergistic increases in neuron death, dendritic pruning, and microglial motility as previously reported. Exogenous fractalkine prevented synergistic Tat and morphine-induced dendritic losses and neuron death even though the inflammatory mediator TNF-α remained significantly elevated. Antibody blockade of CX3CR1 mimicked the toxic effects of morphine plus Tat, but did not add to their toxicity; while fractalkine failed to protect wild-type neurons co-cultured with Cx3cr1-/--null glia against morphine and Tat toxicity. Exogenous fractalkine also normalized microglial motility, which is elevated by Tat and morphine co-exposure, presumably limiting microglial surveillance that may lead to toxic effects on neurons. Fractalkine immunofluorescence was expressed in neurons and to a lesser extent by other cell types, whereas CX3CR1 immunoreactivity or GFP fluorescence in cells cultured from the striatum of Cx3cr1-/- (Cx3cr1GFP/GFP) mice were associated with microglia. Immunoblotting shows that fractalkine levels were unchanged following Tat and/or morphine exposure and there was no increase in released fractalkine as determined by ELISA. By contrast, CX3CR1 protein levels were markedly downregulated.ConclusionsThe results suggest that deficits in fractalkine-CX3CR1 signaling contribute to the synergistic neurotoxic effects of opioids and Tat. Importantly, exogenous fractalkine can selectively protect neurons from the injurious effects of chronic opioid-HIV-1 Tat co-exposure, and this suggests a potential therapeutic course for neuroAIDS. Although the cellular mechanisms underlying neuroprotection are not certain, findings that exogenous fractalkine reduces microglial motility and fails to protect neurons co-cultured with Cx3cr1-/- mixed glia suggest that fractalkine may act by interfering with toxic microglial-neuron interactions.

Highlights

  • Fractalkine/CX3CL1 and its cognate receptor CX3CR1 are abundantly expressed in the central nervous system (CNS)

  • We found that opioids can potentiate the neurodegenerative effects of HIV-1 in the central nervous system (CNS) through direct actions at μ-opioid receptor expressing neural cells [6,7,8,9,10], which has support from findings in nonhuman primates [2] and clinical studies [11,12]

  • This appears to be mediated by CX3CR1 expressed by microglia, since fractalkine neuroprotection is abolished when wild-type neurons are co-cultured with Cx3cr1-null mixed glia and because CX3CR1 is almost exclusively expressed by microglia in these cultures

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Summary

Introduction

Fractalkine/CX3CL1 and its cognate receptor CX3CR1 are abundantly expressed in the CNS. Fractalkine is an unusual C-X3-C motif chemokine that is important in neuron-microglial communication, a coreceptor for HIV infection, and can be neuroprotective. We found that opioids can potentiate the neurodegenerative effects of HIV-1 in the central nervous system (CNS) through direct actions at μ-opioid receptor expressing neural cells [6,7,8,9,10], which has support from findings in nonhuman primates [2] and clinical studies [11,12]. Fractalkine serves a major role as a membrane-tethered neuronal chemokine, while the Cx3cr gene is highly expressed by microglia [26,35]. Cx3cr gene deletion has been shown to limit microglial-mediated neuron death in Alzheimer’s disease [40]

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