Interleukin-1α (IL-1α) is an alarmin involved in the recruitment of macrophages and neutrophils during tissue inflammation. IL-1α can undergo cleavage by proteases, such as calpain-1, that enhances IL-1α binding to its receptor, although proteolytic cleavage is not necessary for biological activity. Macrophages and neutrophils are involved in the retinal inflammation associated with development of AIDS-related human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) retinitis. We therefore performed studies to test the hypothesis that IL-1α gene expression is stimulated intraocularly during retinitis development using two mouse models of murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) retinitis that differ in method of immunosuppression, one by retrovirus-induced immunosuppression (MAIDS) and the other by corticosteroid-induced immunosuppression. MCMV-infected eyes of groups of retinitis-susceptible mice with MAIDS of 10 weeks duration (MAIDS-10 mice) and retinitis-susceptible corticosteroid-treated mice showed significant stimulation of IL-1α mRNA. Western blot analysis confirmed IL-1α protein production within the MCMV-infected eyes of MAIDS-10 mice. Whereas significant intraocular calpain-1 mRNA and protein production were also observed within MCMV-infected eyes of MAIDS-10 mice, the MCMV-infected eyes of retinitis-susceptible corticosteroid-treated mice showed a pattern of mRNA synthesis equivalent to that found within the MCMV-infected eyes of healthy mice that fail to develop retinitis. Our findings suggest a role for the alarmin IL-1α in the pathogenesis of MCMV retinitis in immunosuppressed mice. These findings may extend to the pathogenesis of HCMV retinitis in patients with AIDS or other forms of immunosuppression.
Interleukin-4 (IL-4) and interleukin-10 (IL-10) are key cytokines whose increased production during systemic HIV infection has been associated with decreased cellular immunity during AIDS. We examined whether HIV-induced stimulation of IL-4 or IL-10 production leads to increased susceptibility to AIDS-related human cytomegalovirus retinitis. It was confirmed that there were increased amounts of IL-4 and IL-10 mRNA levels in mice with MAIDS of 10 weeks duration when most susceptible to MCMV retinitis. Surprisingly, however, MCMV-infected eyes of IL-4 -/- and IL-10 -/- mice with MAIDS of 8 weeks duration exhibited retinitis and infectious virus equivalent to that observed in MCMV-infected eyes of wild-type mice with MAIDS. We conclude that neither IL-4 nor IL-10 alone play a role in increased susceptibility to MAIDS-related MCMV retinitis, but may work collectively with other retrovirus-induced immunosuppressive factors to allow for retinal disease.
Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV1) remains one of the most ubiquitous human pathogens on earth. The classical presentation of HSV1 infection occurs as a recurrent lesions of the oral mucosa commonly refer to as the common cold sore. However, HSV1 also is responsible for a range of ocular diseases in immunocompetent persons that are of medical importance, causing vision loss that may result in blindness. These include a recurrent corneal disease, herpes stromal keratitis, and a retinal disease, acute retinal necrosis, for which clinically relevant animal models exist. Diverse host immune mechanisms mediate control over herpesviruses, sustaining lifelong latency in neurons. Programmed cell death (PCD) pathways including apoptosis, necroptosis, and pyroptosis serve as an innate immune mechanism that eliminates virus-infected cells and regulates infection-associated inflammation during virus invasion. These different types of cell death operate under distinct regulatory mechanisms but all server to curtail virus infection. Herpesviruses, including HSV1, have evolved numerous cell death evasion strategies that restrict the hosts ability to control PCD to subvert clearance of infection and modulate inflammation. In this review, we discuss the key studies that have contributed to our current knowledge of cell death pathways manipulated by HSV1 and relate the contributions of cell death to infection and potential ocular disease outcomes.
With the appearance of the worldwide AIDS pandemic four decades ago came a number of debilitating opportunistic infections in patients immunosuppressed by the pathogenic human retrovirus HIV. Among these was a severe sight-threatening retinal disease caused by human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) that remains today a significant cause of vision loss and blindness in untreated AIDS patients without access or sufficient response to combination antiretroviral therapy. Early investigations of AIDS-related HCMV retinitis quickly characterized its hallmark clinical features and unique histopathologic presentation but did not begin to identify the precise virologic and immunologic events that allow the onset and development of this retinal disease during HIV-induced immunosuppression. Toward this end, several mouse models of experimental cytomegalovirus retinitis have been developed to provide new insights into the pathophysiology of HCMV retinitis during AIDS. Herein, we provide a summary and comparison of these mouse models of AIDS-related HCMV retinitis with particular emphasis on one mouse model developed in our laboratory in which mice with a murine acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (MAIDS) of murine retrovirus origin develops a reproducible and well characterized retinitis following intraocular infection with murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV). The MAIDS model of MCMV retinitis has advanced the discovery of many clinically relevant virologic and immunologic mechanisms of virus-induced retinal tissue destruction that are discussed and summarized in this review. These findings may extend to the pathogenesis of AIDS-related HCMV retinitis and other AIDS-related opportunistic virus infections.
The mechanisms that contribute to retinal tissue destruction during the onset and progression of AIDS-related human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) retinitis remain unclear. Evidence for the stimulation of multiple cell death pathways including apoptosis, necroptosis, and pyroptosis during the pathogenesis of experimental murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) retinitis in mice with retrovirus-induced immunosuppression (MAIDS) has been reported. Parthanatos is a caspase-independent cell death pathway mediated by rapid overactivation of poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP-1) and distinct from other cell death pathways. Using the MAIDS model of MCMV retinitis, studies were performed to test the hypothesis that intraocular MCMV infection of mice with MAIDS stimulates parthanatos-associated messenger RNAs (mRNAs) and proteins within the eye during the development of retinal necrosis that takes place by 10 days after MCMV infection. MCMV-infected eyes of MAIDS mice exhibited significant stimulation of PARP-1 mRNA and proteins at 3 days after infection but declined thereafter at 6 and 10 days after infection. Additional studies showed the intraocular stimulation of mRNAs or proteins before MCMV retinitis development for two additional participants in parthanatos, polymer of ADP-ribose and poly (ADP-ribose) glycohydrolase. These results provide new evidence for a role for parthanatos during MAIDS-related MCMV retinitis that may also extend to AIDS-related HCMV retinitis.
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Christopher D. Bowen;
Daniel W. Renner;
Jacob T Shreve;
Yolanda Tafuri;
Kimberly M. Payne;
Richard Dix;
Paul R. Kinchington;
Derek Gatherer;
Moriah L. Szpara
Herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) is a widespread global pathogen, of which the strain KOS is one of the most extensively studied. Previous sequence studies revealed that KOS does not cluster with other strains of North American geographic origin, but instead clustered with Asian strains. We sequenced a historical isolate of the original KOS strain, called KOS63, along with a separately isolated strain attributed to the same source individual, termed KOS79. Genomic analyses revealed that KOS63 closely resembled other recently sequenced isolates of KOS and was of Asian origin, but that KOS79 was a genetically unrelated strain that clustered in genetic distance analyses with HSV-1 strains of North American/European origin. These data suggest that the human source of KOS63 and KOS79 could have been infected with two genetically unrelated strains of disparate geographic origins. A PCR RFLP test was developed for rapid identification of these strains.
AIDS-related human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) retinitis remains a major ophthalmologic problem worldwide. Although this sight-threatening disease is well characterized clinically, many pathogenic issues remain unresolved, among them a basic understanding of the relative roles of cell death pathways during development of retinal tissue destruction. Using an established model of experimental murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) retinitis in mice with retrovirus-induced immunosuppression (MAIDS), we initially investigated MCMV-infected eyes for evidence of apoptosis-associated molecules in mice with MAIDS of 4 weeks' (MAIDS-4) and 10 weeks' (MAIDS-10) duration, which were resistant and susceptible to retinal disease, respectively, but which harbored equivalent amounts of infectious MCMV. Whereas MCMV-infected eyes of MAIDS-4 mice showed little evidence of apoptosis-associated molecules, MCMV-infected eyes of MAIDS-10 mice showed significant amounts of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-(α), TNF receptors 1 and 2, active caspase 8, active caspase 3, TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL), TRAIL-R(DR5), Fas, and Fas ligand mRNAs and/or proteins, all detected at peak amounts prior to development of most severe retinal disease. Immunohistochemical staining showed macrophages, granulocytes (neutrophils), Müller cells, and microglial cells as TNF-α sources. Remarkably, quantification of apoptosis by terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end labeling (TUNEL) assay suggested that apoptosis contributed minimally to retinal disease in MCMV-infected eyes of MAIDS-10 mice. Subsequent studies demonstrated that MCMV-infected eyes of MAIDS-10 mice, but not MAIDS-4 mice, showed evidence of significant increases in molecules associated with two additional cell death pathways, necroptosis (receptorinteracting protein 1 [RIP1] and RIP3 mRNAs) and pyroptosis (caspase 1, interleukin 1(β [IL-1β] , and IL-18 mRNAs). We conclude that apoptosis, necroptosis, and pyroptosis participate simultaneously during MAIDS-related MCMV retinitis, and all may play a role during AIDS-related HCMV retinitis.
Pyroptosis is a caspase-dependent programmed cell death pathway that initiates and sustains inflammation through release of pro-inflammatory cytokines interleukin (IL)-1β and IL-18 following formation of gasdermin D (GSDMD)-mediated membrane pores. To determine the possible pathogenic contributions of pyroptosis toward development of full-thickness retinal necrosis during AIDS-related human cytomegalovirus retinitis, we performed a series of studies using an established model of experimental murine cytomegalovirus (MCMV) retinitis in mice with retrovirus-induced immunosuppression (MAIDS). Initial investigations demonstrated significant transcription and translation of key pyroptosis-associated genes within the ocular compartments of MCMV-infected eyes of mice with MAIDS. Subsequent investigations compared MCMV-infected eyes of groups of wildtype MAIDS mice with MCMV-infected eyes of groups of caspase-1−/− MAIDS mice, GSDMD−/− MAIDS mice, or IL-18−/− MAIDS mice to explore a possible contribution of pyroptosis towards the pathogenesis of MAIDS-related MCMV retinitis. Histopathologic analysis revealed typical full-thickness retinal necrosis in 100% of MCMV-infected eyes of wildtype MAIDS mice. In sharp contrast, none (0%) of MCMV-infected eyes of MAIDS mice that were deficient in either caspase-1, GSDMD, or IL-18 developed full-thickness retinal necrosis but instead exhibited an atypical pattern of retinal disease characterized by thickening and proliferation of the retinal pigmented epithelium layer with relative sparing of the neurosensory retina. Surprisingly, MCMV-infected eyes of all groups of deficient MAIDS mice harbored equivalent intraocular amounts of infectious virus as seen in MCMV-infected eyes of groups of wildtype MAIDS mice despite failure to develop full-thickness retinal necrosis. We conclude that pyroptosis plays a significant role in the development of full-thickness retinal necrosis during the pathogenesis of MAIDS-related MCMV retinitis. This observation may extend to the pathogenesis of AIDS-related HCMV retinitis and other AIDS-related opportunistic virus infections.
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Scott W. Cousins;
Diego G. Espinosa-Heidmann;
Daniel M. Miller;
Simone Pereira-Simon;
Eleut P. Hernandez;
Hsin Chien;
Courtney Meier-Jewett;
Richard Dix
The neovascular (wet) form of age-related macular degeneration (AMD) leads to vision loss due to choroidal neovascularization (CNV). Since macrophages are important in CNV development, and cytomegalovirus (CMV)-specific IgG serum titers in patients with wet AMD are elevated, we hypothesized that chronic CMV infection contributes to wet AMD, possibly by pro-angiogenic macrophage activation. This hypothesis was tested using an established mouse model of experimental CNV. At 6 days, 6 weeks, or 12 weeks after infection with murine CMV (MCMV), laser-induced CNV was performed, and CNV severity was determined 4 weeks later by analysis of choroidal flatmounts. Although all MCMV-infected mice exhibited more severe CNV when compared with control mice, the most severe CNV developed in mice with chronic infection, a time when MCMV-specific gene sequences could not be detected within choroidal tissues. Splenic macrophages collected from mice with chronic MCMV infection, however, expressed significantly greater levels of TNF-α, COX-2, MMP-9, and, most significantly, VEGF transcripts by quantitative RT-PCR assay when compared to splenic macrophages from control mice. Direct MCMV infection of monolayers of IC-21 mouse macrophages confirmed significant stimulation of VEGF mRNA and VEGF protein as determined by quantitative RT-PCR assay, ELISA, and immunostaining. Stimulation of VEGF production in vivo and in vitro was sensitive to the antiviral ganciclovir. These studies suggest that chronic CMV infection may serve as a heretofore unrecognized risk factor in the pathogenesis of wet AMD. One mechanism by which chronic CMV infection might promote increased CNV severity is via stimulation of macrophages to make pro-angiogenic factors (VEGF), an outcome that requires active virus replication.