Research
Immune System Disease
Fighting Ability
Methadone Promotes HIV Infection In Cell Culture
5-16-2001
Utrecht, The Netherlands — Methadone, the drug that
is widely used in drug treatment centers to treat heroin
addicts, stimulates HIV infection of human immune cells
studied in cell cultures, according to immunology researchers
from The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.
The
researchers proposed that HIV-infected patients receiving
methadone to treat drug abuse should have their blood and
immune status closely monitored for possible adverse effects
of the treatment. They reported their results on Methadone
and HIV infection today at an international conference of
the PsychoNeuroImmunology Research Society, meeting in Utrecht.
It
is well established that intravenous drug users are at high
risk for HIV and AIDS infection. In addition to disease
that is spread by HIV-contaminated needles, drugs such as
morphine and heroin – classified as opiates –
have been shown to stimulate HIV replication in human immune
cells. Methadone is a synthetic opiate that shares many
biological and chemical properties with morphine and heroin.
"Because methadone has been shown to reduce human immune
responses, we decided to study its effects on HIV infection
of human immune cells," said Wen-Zhe Ho, M.D., an immunology
researcher at Children’s Hospital, who presented the
research.
Working
in cell cultures, the researchers found that methadone increased
HIV infection of human microglial cells and macrophages,
two important types of immune cells that are reservoirs
for the virus in the central nervous system and peripheral
tissues.
Furthermore, when added to blood cells taken from
HIV-infected patients, methadone changed latent HIV infection to active
HIV replication in the cell cultures. Replication is the process by
which HIV spreads from infected cells throughout a patient’s
body.
The researchers also investigated possible mechanisms
by which methadone enhances HIV infection of these immune cells. They
showed that methadone has the ability to increase expression of CCR5
receptors on the cell membrane; these receptors provide a method for
HIV to enter immune cells. In addition, their study demonstrated that
methadone could activate HIV LTR, a promoter that causes HIV infection
to switch from latency to an active state.
"These
results support our hypothesis that, like other opiate drugs, methadone
may raise the risk of HIV infection," said Dr. Ho. "Further
investigations should be done to study whether our laboratory results
accurately reflect how HIV infection progresses in patients receiving
methadone." In their paper, Dr. Ho’s team suggested that
HIV-infected patients being treated with methadone should be monitored
for changes in HIV viral load and CD4 cell counts, both of which are
indicators of disease progression in HIV/AIDS.
In addition
to Dr. Ho, other co-authors of this study on Methadone and HIV infection
from Children’s Hospital were Yuan Li, M.D., Xu Wang, Sha Tian,
and Steven D. Douglas, M.D. The study was supported by the National
Institutes of Health.
Founded in 1855 as the nation's first pediatric hospital,
The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia is ranked today as the
best pediatric hospital in the nation by a comprehensive Child Magazine
survey. Its pediatric research program is among the largest in the
country, ranking second in National Institutes of Health funding.
This
article on Methadone and HIV infection has been adapted from a news
release issued by Childrens Hospital Of Philadelphia, www.chop.edu.
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