UCLA research links HIV to age-accelerating cellular changes
Study suggests adults infected with the virus can develop age-related diseases a decade earlier than their uninfected peers
By Enrique Rivero | April 03 2015
People undergoing treatment for HIV-1 have an increased risk for earlier onset of
age-related illnesses such as some cancers, renal and kidney disease, frailty, osteoporosis
and neurocognitive disease. But is it because of the virus that causes AIDS or the treatment?
To answer that question, researchers at the UCLA AIDS Institute and Center for AIDS Research and
the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study investigated
whether the virus induces age-associated epigenetic changes — that is, changes to the DNA that in turn
lead to changes in expression of gene levels without changing the inherited genetic code. These
changes affect biological processes and can be brought on by environmental factors or by the
aging process itself.
In a study published online in the
peer-reviewed journal PLOS ONE, the researchers suggest that HIV itself accelerates these
aging related changes by more than 14 years.
“While we were surprised by the number of epigenetic changes that were significantly associated with
both aging and HIV-infection, we were most surprised that the data suggests HIV-infection can
accelerate aging-related epigenetic changes by 13.7 to 14.7 years,” said Beth Jamieson,
professor of medicine in the division of hematology/oncology at the David Geffen
School of Medicine at UCLA and one of the study's senior authors. “This number
is in line with both anecdotal and published data suggesting that treated
HIV-infected adults can develop the diseases of aging mentioned above,
approximately a decade earlier than their uninfected peers.”
The researchers examined samples of white blood cells stored by UCLA's MACS site, which has been
collecting biological samples as well as clinical, behavioral and socioeconomic data on men
infected with HIV and men at risk for HIV infection since 1983. The scientists selected
white blood cell samples from both young (20 to 35 years old) and older (36 to 56)
adults who at the time had not started antiretroviral therapy. They divided each
group into 12 HIV-infected and 12 age-matched HIV-uninfected samples for a
total of 96 samples, and then extracted the DNA from the samples and
analyzed it for epigenetic patterns.
They compared epigenetic patterns that are strongly associated with aging to changes that occur
during HIV-infection and found significant overlap in the two patterns, and used those
overlapping patterns to estimate the biological age of HIV-infected, untreated
adults. The researchers found that at the epigenetic level, the adults
appeared to be approximately 14 years older than their chronologic
age, said Jamieson, who also is director of the UCLA Flow Cytometry Core.
Although the findings demonstrated that HIV infection can accelerate aging-related epigenetics,
the researchers could not determine whether antiretroviral therapy restores those patterns to be
more age-appropriate or whether the drugs themselves cause additional changes.
Taken together, however, “these data suggest that HIV-1 infection does accelerate some aspects of
aging and that general aging, and HIV-1 related aging, work through at least some common
mechanisms,” the authors write. “These results are an important first step for finding
potential therapeutic approaches to mitigate the effects of both HIV and aging."
The study's co-authors are Tammy Rickabaugh, Ruth Baxter, Mary Sehl, Janet Sinsheimer, Patricia Hultin,
Lance Hultin, Austin Quach, Otoniel Martinez-Maza, Steve Horvath and Eric Vilain, all of UCLA.
The study was supported by a National Institute on Aging grant (1RO1-AG-030327), a UCLA AIDS
Institute/CFAR seed grant from the National Institutes of Health (AI-028697) an NIH T032 training
grant (5T32GM008243-25) and a National Science Foundation grant (DMS-1264153).
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Media Contact:
Enrique Rivero
310-794-2273
erivero@mednet.ucla.edu
Source: http://newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/ucla-research-links-hiv-to-age-accelerating-cellular-changes
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