2022
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-08364-0
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Characterization of basal ganglia volume changes in the context of HIV and polysubstance use

Abstract: HIV and psychoactive substances can impact the integrity of the basal ganglia (BG), a neural substrate of cognition, motor control, and reward-seeking behaviors. This study assessed BG gray matter (GM) volume as a function of polysubstance (stimulant and opioid) use and HIV status. We hypothesized that comorbid polysubstance use and HIV seropositivity would alter BG GM volume differently than would polysubstance use or HIV status alone. We collected structural MRI scans, substance use history, and HIV diagnose… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…To determine the effect of THC on the brain during chronic SIV infection, we undertook a systems biology approach by profiling genome wide changes in transcriptome and microRNA expression in whole BG of chronically SIV-infected RMs. We selected the basal ganglia because this brain region controls motor activity [111] and is severely impacted by HIV/SIV due to its susceptibility to high levels of viral replication [112][113][114]. In line with the host response to active viral replication, a gene expression signature dominated by chemokines (CCL2, CXCL10), neuroimmune activation (NLRC5), NFκB activation (RNF31), and more importantly, type-I IFN response (ISG15, ISG20, HERC5, IFIT1, IRF1, IRF7), and type I IFN stimulated antiviral signaling (ZC3HAV1, TMRM173, DDX58, MX1, BST2, IFITM3, IFITM1), was significantly upregulated in BG of VEH/SIV RMs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To determine the effect of THC on the brain during chronic SIV infection, we undertook a systems biology approach by profiling genome wide changes in transcriptome and microRNA expression in whole BG of chronically SIV-infected RMs. We selected the basal ganglia because this brain region controls motor activity [111] and is severely impacted by HIV/SIV due to its susceptibility to high levels of viral replication [112][113][114]. In line with the host response to active viral replication, a gene expression signature dominated by chemokines (CCL2, CXCL10), neuroimmune activation (NLRC5), NFκB activation (RNF31), and more importantly, type-I IFN response (ISG15, ISG20, HERC5, IFIT1, IRF1, IRF7), and type I IFN stimulated antiviral signaling (ZC3HAV1, TMRM173, DDX58, MX1, BST2, IFITM3, IFITM1), was significantly upregulated in BG of VEH/SIV RMs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The drug screen (Aim Screen Multidrug 9 by Germaine Laboratories) tested for the presence of the following substances in the urine: cocaine, amphetamine, methamphetamine, marijuana, methadone, opiates, phencyclidine, barbiturates, and benzodiazepines. A detailed history of lifetime drug and alcohol exposure was obtained in both groups using a modified version of the Lifetime Drug Use Questionnaire ( Czermak et al, 2005 ; Marvel et al, 2012 ; Anderson et al, 2013 , 2016 ; Monick et al, 2022 ). These measures can be seen in Table 2 , including age of first substance use, duration of use (time between the first and last substance use), abstinence duration since last substance use, and for some substances, the calculated average frequency of use during periods of use, as modeled after the calculation in Monick et al (2022) .…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A detailed history of lifetime drug and alcohol exposure was obtained in both groups using a modified version of the Lifetime Drug Use Questionnaire ( Czermak et al, 2005 ; Marvel et al, 2012 ; Anderson et al, 2013 , 2016 ; Monick et al, 2022 ). These measures can be seen in Table 2 , including age of first substance use, duration of use (time between the first and last substance use), abstinence duration since last substance use, and for some substances, the calculated average frequency of use during periods of use, as modeled after the calculation in Monick et al (2022) . This measure for frequency of use further characterized the cocaine and opioid use in participants, providing a measure that took into consideration the changing frequencies with which participants used substances throughout their total duration of use.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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