Antiretroviral drug therapy does not reduce neuroinflammation in an HIV-1 infection brain organoid model.

TitleAntiretroviral drug therapy does not reduce neuroinflammation in an HIV-1 infection brain organoid model.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2025
AuthorsMartinez-Meza S, Premeaux TA, Cirigliano SM, Friday CM, Michael S, Mediouni S, Valente ST, Ndhlovu LC, Fine HA, O'Brien RLFurler, Nixon DF
JournalJ Neuroinflammation
Volume22
Issue1
Pagination66
Date Published2025 Mar 05
ISSN1742-2094
KeywordsAnti-Retroviral Agents, Brain, Cells, Cultured, Coculture Techniques, HIV Infections, HIV-1, Humans, Microglia, Neuroinflammatory Diseases, Organoids
Abstract

BACKGROUND: HIV-1-associated neurocognitive impairment (HIV-1-NCI) is marked by ongoing and chronic neuroinflammation with loss and decline in neuronal function even when antiretroviral drug therapy (ART) successfully suppresses viral replication. Microglia, the primary reservoirs of HIV-1 in the central nervous system (CNS), play a significant role in maintaining this neuroinflammatory state. However, understanding how chronic neuroinflammation is generated and sustained by HIV-1, or impacted by ART, is difficult due to limited access to human CNS tissue.

METHODS: We generated an in vitro model of admixed hematopoietic progenitor cell (HPC) derived microglia embedded into embryonic stem cell (ESC) derived Brain Organoids (BO). Microglia were infected with HIV-1 prior to co-culture. Infected microglia were co-cultured with brain organoids BOs to infiltrate the BOs and establish a model for HIV-1 infection, "HIV-1 M-BO". HIV-1 M-BOs were treated with ART for variable directions. HIV-1 infection was monitored with p24 ELISA and by digital droplet PCR (ddPCR). Inflammation was measured by cytokine or p-NF-kB levels using multiplex ELISA, flow cytometry and confocal microscopy.

RESULTS: HIV-1 infected microglia could be co-cultured with BOs to create a model for "brain" HIV-1 infection. Although HIV-1 infected microglia were the initial source of pro-inflammatory cytokines, astrocytes, neurons and neural stem cells also had increased p-NF-kB levels, along with elevated CCL2 levels in the supernatant of HIV-1 M-BOs compared to Uninfected M-BOs. ART suppressed the virus to levels below the limit of detection but did not decrease neuroinflammation.

CONCLUSIONS: These findings indicate that HIV-1 infected microglia are pro-inflammatory. Although ART significantly suppressed HIV-1 levels, neuronal inflammation persisted in ART-treated HIV-1 M-BOs. Together, these findings indicate that HIV-1 infection of microglia infiltrated into BOs provides a robust in vitro model to understand the impact of HIV-1 and ART on neuroinflammation.

DOI10.1186/s12974-025-03375-w
Alternate JournalJ Neuroinflammation
PubMed ID40045391
PubMed Central IDPMC11881274
Grant ListR01 DA052027 / DA / NIDA NIH HHS / United States
UM1 AI164559 / AI / NIAID NIH HHS / United States