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NIH Awards Einstein $3 Million Grant to Create Center for HIV-Related Brain Disease

Jun 15, 2009 -- The National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health has awarded a three-year, $3-million grant to Albert Einstein College of Medicine of 91黑料 to establish a research center to study the neurological complications that afflict people infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. Despite the effectiveness of antiretroviral therapy for HIV, neurological complications associated with HIV infection鈥攊ncluding cognitive, behavioral, and motor abnormalities鈥攈ave become more common as infected individuals live longer. 鈥淢ore than a quarter of those infected with HIV exhibit some form of cognitive impairment,鈥 says Ruth Hogue Angeletti, PhD, professor of developmental and molecular biology and of biochemistry at Einstein, who will direct the Einstein Proteomics Research Center for HIV-Associated Neurological Disorders and Substance Abuse. 鈥淏y the time HIV-infected people have progressed to AIDS, more than half display significant neurological deficits.鈥 This new proteomics center will use powerful mass spectrometers to identify the brain proteins responsible for neurological complications in people infected with HIV鈥攑articularly those who are also addicted to drugs. Proteomics is the branch of molecular biology that studies the set of proteins expressed by the genes of an organism. HIV鈥檚 neurological complications (commonly referred to as neuro-AIDS) primarily stem from toxic proteins produced by immune cells called monocytes, which recruit HIV into the central nervous system. Neuro-AIDS can lead to AIDS dementia complex, HIV-related encephalitis, and fungal and parasitic infections. The Einstein Proteomics Research Center will investigate the mechanism by which HIV infection causes neurological deficits and identify biomarkers that signal when these deficits begin and how they progress over time. 鈥淭he biomarkers identified by this new center should permit the early detection of neurological disease in HIV-infected individuals,鈥 says co-principal investigator Harris Goldstein, MD, director of the Einstein-Montefiore Center for AIDS Research and professor of pediatrics and of microbiology and immunology at Einstein. 鈥淲e have developed a unique transgenic HIV mouse model that displays some features of neuro-AIDS,鈥 Goldstein noted. 鈥淏y studying this mouse model in the proteomics center, we鈥檒l be able to determine how HIV infection influences the proteins expressed in the brain. These results may help us to pinpoint new therapeutic targets for preventing the progression of this devastating consequence of HIV infection.鈥 Several studies of autopsy tissue show that the destructive neuro-AIDS process is worsened by drug abuse, particularly the use of opioids such as heroin. Unfortunately, the combination of HIV infection and drug addiction is all too common. In New York City, for example, more than half of all AIDS cases result directly or indirectly from injection drug use. 鈥淭herefore, the intersection between HIV infection and opioid use represents an especially important area of neuro-AIDS research on which our proteomics center will focus,鈥 said Angeletti. Each of the center鈥檚 projects will evaluate the neurological effects of buprenorphine鈥攁 new, less-addictive alternative to methadone. Compared with methadone, buprenorphine can be given at higher doses with fewer adverse effects. But it could conceivably contribute to neurological problems when used by drugs addicts who are infected with HIV. 鈥淭he blood-brain barrier protects the brain from HIV-infected monocytes and other neuroinflammatory mediators, and we don鈥檛 yet know how buprenorphine affects this barrier,鈥 says co-principal investigator Joan W. Berman, PhD, professor in the departments of pathology and microbiology and immunology at Einstein. 鈥淲e need to understand buprenorphine鈥檚 neurological impact before use of the drug becomes widespread in this patient population.鈥 On the other hand, the center鈥檚 research may show that buprenorphine is a better alternative than methadone for people infected with HIV. 鈥淏ecause of its unique pharmacological properties, buprenorphine may provide neuropsychological benefits for HIV-infected people who are addicted to opioids,鈥 said Julia H. Arnsten, MD, MPH, the center鈥檚 other co-principal investigator and professor of medicine, of epidemiology and population health, and of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Einstein. As part of the study, Arnsten will recruit a cohort of HIV-infected patients who are undergoing treatment for drug addiction. These people will be monitored to see whether buprenorphine influences the development of neurological deficits. Other key investigators for this center are Dr. Louis Weiss in the departments of pathology and of medicine, Dr. Andras Fiser in the departments of systems and computational biology and of biochemistry, Dr. Abdissa Negassa in the department of epidemiology and population health, and Dr. Monica Rivera-Mindt in the department of psychology at Fordham University.

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