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Review
. 2014 Feb;94(2):120-8.
doi: 10.1038/labinvest.2013.142. Epub 2013 Dec 16.

Aging and HIV/AIDS: pathogenetic role of therapeutic side effects

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Review

Aging and HIV/AIDS: pathogenetic role of therapeutic side effects

Rebecca A Torres et al. Lab Invest. 2014 Feb.

Abstract

The intersection of aging and HIV/AIDS is a looming 'epidemic within an epidemic.' This paper reviews how HIV/AIDS and its therapy cause premature aging or contribute mechanistically to HIV-associated non-AIDS illnesses (HANA). Survival with HIV/AIDS has markedly improved by therapy combinations containing nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs), non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, and protease inhibitors (PIs) called HAART (highly active antiretroviral therapy). Because NRTIs and PIs together prevent or attenuate HIV-1 replication, and prolong life, the population of aging patients with HIV/AIDS increases accordingly. However, illnesses frequently associated with aging in the absence of HIV/AIDS appear to occur prematurely in HIV/AIDS patients. Theories that help to explain biological aging include oxidative stress (where mitochondrial oxidative injury exceeds antioxidant defense), chromosome telomere shortening with associated cellular senescence, and accumulation of lamin A precursors (a nuclear envelop protein). Each of these has the potential to be enhanced or caused by HIV/AIDS, antiretroviral therapy, or both. Antiretroviral therapy has been shown to enhance events seen in biological aging. Specifically, antiretroviral NRTIs cause mitochondrial dysfunction, oxidative stress, and mitochondrial DNA defects that resemble features of both HANA and aging. More recent clinical evidence points to telomere shortening caused by NRTI triphosphate-induced inhibition of telomerase, suggesting telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) inhibition as being a pathogenetic contributor to premature aging in HIV/AIDS. PIs may also have a role in premature aging in HIV/AIDS as they cause prelamin A accumulation. Overall, toxic side effects of HAART may both resemble and promote events of aging and are worthy of mechanistic studies.

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Conflict of interest statement

Disclosure/Conflict of Interest: The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Aging in AIDS results from the interplay of biological events, toxic events, and therapeutic side effects.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Relationship between mitochondrial dysfunction from HIV/AIDS therapy and mitochondrial DNA replication and mitochondrial telomerase. Both mitochondrial TERT and pol γ are inhibited by AZTTP and other NRTI triphosphates. These interactions may promote the changes of aging, including oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, loss of TERT protection of mtDNA, and other events. It invokes a new relationship between inhibition of both enzymes and NRTIs in the mitochondria.

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