儿童和青少年艾滋病相关肾病的发病机制:在基因与环境相互作用的时代,40 年后的认真审视。

Patricio E Ray, Jinliang Li, Jharna Das, Lian Xu, Jing Yu, Zhe Han
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摘要

艾滋病毒相关性肾病(HIVAN)是一种肾病,主要影响非洲血统、HIV-1 病毒载量高的人群。新的抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)能够高效预防和改善 HIVAN 的治疗效果。然而,在全世界范围内,为感染艾滋病毒的儿童和青少年(CALWH)提供长期抗逆转录病毒疗法仍然是一项重大挑战。包括生活在撒哈拉以南非洲地区的 250 多万儿童和青少年艾滋病病毒感染者仍然面临着罹患艾滋病病毒性脑炎的高风险。我们对 HIVAN 发病机制的了解大多基于对转基因小鼠和成年 HIVAN 患者的研究。然而,与成人相比,CALWH 可能会经历不同的健康结果、风险因素和对 HIVAN 的易感性。本文回顾了过去 40 年来人们在了解 CALWH HIVAN 发病机制方面所取得的进展,重点探讨了 HIV 病毒与遗传和环境因素如何共同导致该疾病的发生。载脂蛋白-1(APOL1)基因的两个风险等位基因在 HIVAN 中起着关键作用,这一里程碑式的发现极大地推动了我们对该疾病发病机制的了解。然而,我们仍需了解抗逆转录病毒疗法后肾脏炎症仍持续存在的原因,并确定肾脏是否可能藏有需要清除才能永久治愈艾滋病病毒的艾滋病病毒库。出于这些原因,我们强调回顾 HIV-1 如何感染肾细胞、影响其生长和再生,并讨论炎性细胞因子和 APOL1 如何影响儿童 HIVAN 的预后。
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Pathogenesis of HIV associated nephropathy in children and adolescents: taking a hard look 40 years later in the era of gene-environmental interaction.

HIV-associated nephropathy (HIVAN) is a kidney disease that affects mainly people of African ancestry with a high HIV-1 viral load. New antiretroviral therapies (ART) have been highly efficient preventing and improving the outcome of HIVAN. However, providing chronic ART to children and adolescents living with HIV (CALWH) remains a significant challenge all over the world. More that 2.5 million CALWH, including those living in Sub-Saharan Africa, continue to be at high risk of developing HIVAN. Much of our understanding of the pathogenesis of HIVAN is based on studies conducted in transgenic mice and adults with HIVAN. However, CALWH may experience different health outcomes, risk factors, and susceptibilities to HIVAN in comparison to adults. This article reviews the progress made over the last 40 years in understanding the pathogenesis of HIVAN in CALWH, focusing on how the HIV virus, alongside genetic and environmental factors, contributes to the development of this disease. The landmark discovery that two risks alleles of the Apolipoprotein-1 (APOL1) gene play a critical role in HIVAN has significantly advanced our understanding of the disease's pathogenesis. However, we still need to understand why renal inflammation persists despite ART and determine whether the kidney may harbor HIV reservoirs that need to be eliminated to cure HIV permanently. For these reasons, we emphasize reviewing how HIV-1 infects renal cells, affects their growth and regeneration, and discussing how inflammatory cytokines and APOL1 affect the outcome of childhood HIVAN.

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