Modeling HIV-1 Infection in CNS via Infected Monocytes Using Immunocompetent Brain Organoids

Methods Mol Biol. 2024:2807:261-270. doi: 10.1007/978-1-0716-3862-0_18.

Abstract

The development of 3D-organoid models has revolutionized the way diseases are studied. Recently, our brain organoid model has been shown to recapitulate in in vitro the human brain cytoarchitecture originally encountered in HIV-1 neuropathogenesis, allowing downstream applications. Infected monocytes, macrophages, and microglia are critically important immune cells for infection and dissemination of HIV-1 throughout brain during acute and chronic phase of the disease. Once in the brain parenchyma, long-lived infected monocytes/macrophages along with resident microglia contribute to the establishment of CNS latency in people with HIV (PWH). Hence, it is important to better understand how HIV-1 enters and establishes infection and latency in CNS to further develop cure strategies. Here we detailed an accessible protocol to incorporate monocytes (infected and/or labeled) as a model of transmigration of peripheral monocytes into brain organoids that can be applied to characterize HIV-1 neuroinvasion and virus dissemination.

Keywords: 3D brain organoids; Disease model; HIV neuropathogenesis; Microglia; Monocytes; Neuroinflammation; THP-1.

MeSH terms

  • Brain* / immunology
  • Brain* / pathology
  • Brain* / virology
  • HIV Infections* / immunology
  • HIV Infections* / pathology
  • HIV Infections* / virology
  • HIV-1* / pathogenicity
  • HIV-1* / physiology
  • Humans
  • Macrophages / immunology
  • Macrophages / virology
  • Microglia / immunology
  • Microglia / pathology
  • Microglia / virology
  • Monocytes* / immunology
  • Monocytes* / virology
  • Organoids* / pathology
  • Organoids* / virology
  • Virus Latency