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Post-exposure prophylaxis for SIV revisited: Animal model for HIV prevention

BACKGROUND: A 4-week, uninterrupted treatment with 9-(2-phosphonyl-methoxypropyly)adenine (PMPA, commonly called tenofovir) completely prevents simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV(mne)) infection in cynomolgus macaques if treatment begins within 24 hours after SIV(mne )inoculation, but is less effect...

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Autores principales: Emau, Peter, Jiang, Yonghou, Agy, Michael B, Tian, Baoping, Bekele, Girma, Tsai, Che-Chung
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1687192/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17132170
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-6405-3-29
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author Emau, Peter
Jiang, Yonghou
Agy, Michael B
Tian, Baoping
Bekele, Girma
Tsai, Che-Chung
author_facet Emau, Peter
Jiang, Yonghou
Agy, Michael B
Tian, Baoping
Bekele, Girma
Tsai, Che-Chung
author_sort Emau, Peter
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: A 4-week, uninterrupted treatment with 9-(2-phosphonyl-methoxypropyly)adenine (PMPA, commonly called tenofovir) completely prevents simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV(mne)) infection in cynomolgus macaques if treatment begins within 24 hours after SIV(mne )inoculation, but is less effective if treatment is delayed or duration of treatment is shortened. Critical factors for efficacy include timing and duration of treatment, potency of antiretroviral drug and a contribution from antiviral immune responses. Therefore, we evaluated the impact of one or more treatment interruptions plus SIV(mne )re-exposures on efficacy of PMPA treatment to prevent SIV(mne )infection in cynomolgus macaques. We also evaluated whether macaques with pre-existing SIV immune responses show increased efficacy of treatment. Eight PMPA-treated, virus-negative and seronegative macaques, and five PMPA-treated, virus-negative but weakly or strongly seropositive macaques were re-inoculated with SIV(mne )and treated with PMPA starting 24 hr post inoculation. Thereafter, they received either a 5-week treatment involving one interruption plus one SIV(mne )challenge or a 10-week treatment involving six interruptions plus six SIV(mne )challenges early during treatment. Parameters measured were plasma SIV RNA, SIV-antibody response, CD4+ T lymphocyte subsets and in vivo CD8+ cell-suppression of virus infection. RESULTS: All seronegative macaques developed persistent antibody response beginning 4 to 8 weeks after stopping PMPA-treatment in absence of viremia in a majority of macaques and coinciding with onset of intermittent viremia in other macaques. In contrast, all weakly or strongly seropositive macaques showed immediate increase in titers (> 1600) of SIV antibodies, even before the end of PMPA-treatment, and in absence of detectable viremia. However, in vivo CD8+ -cell depletion revealed CD8 cell-suppression of viremia and persistence of virus in the macaques as long as 2 years after PMPA-treatment, even in aviremic macaques. Unlike untreated macaques, a treated macaque controlled viral replication and blocked CD4+ T cell depletion when challenged with a heterologus chimeric SIV/HIV-1 virus called SHIV(89.6P.) CONCLUSION: A single interruption plus one SIV(mne )challenge was as sufficient as six interruptions plus six SIV(mne )challenges in reducing efficacy of PMPA, but results in long-term persistence of virus infection suppressed by CD8+ cells. Efficacy of PMPA treatment was highest in macaques with pre-existing SIV immune responses.
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spelling pubmed-16871922006-12-07 Post-exposure prophylaxis for SIV revisited: Animal model for HIV prevention Emau, Peter Jiang, Yonghou Agy, Michael B Tian, Baoping Bekele, Girma Tsai, Che-Chung AIDS Res Ther Research BACKGROUND: A 4-week, uninterrupted treatment with 9-(2-phosphonyl-methoxypropyly)adenine (PMPA, commonly called tenofovir) completely prevents simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV(mne)) infection in cynomolgus macaques if treatment begins within 24 hours after SIV(mne )inoculation, but is less effective if treatment is delayed or duration of treatment is shortened. Critical factors for efficacy include timing and duration of treatment, potency of antiretroviral drug and a contribution from antiviral immune responses. Therefore, we evaluated the impact of one or more treatment interruptions plus SIV(mne )re-exposures on efficacy of PMPA treatment to prevent SIV(mne )infection in cynomolgus macaques. We also evaluated whether macaques with pre-existing SIV immune responses show increased efficacy of treatment. Eight PMPA-treated, virus-negative and seronegative macaques, and five PMPA-treated, virus-negative but weakly or strongly seropositive macaques were re-inoculated with SIV(mne )and treated with PMPA starting 24 hr post inoculation. Thereafter, they received either a 5-week treatment involving one interruption plus one SIV(mne )challenge or a 10-week treatment involving six interruptions plus six SIV(mne )challenges early during treatment. Parameters measured were plasma SIV RNA, SIV-antibody response, CD4+ T lymphocyte subsets and in vivo CD8+ cell-suppression of virus infection. RESULTS: All seronegative macaques developed persistent antibody response beginning 4 to 8 weeks after stopping PMPA-treatment in absence of viremia in a majority of macaques and coinciding with onset of intermittent viremia in other macaques. In contrast, all weakly or strongly seropositive macaques showed immediate increase in titers (> 1600) of SIV antibodies, even before the end of PMPA-treatment, and in absence of detectable viremia. However, in vivo CD8+ -cell depletion revealed CD8 cell-suppression of viremia and persistence of virus in the macaques as long as 2 years after PMPA-treatment, even in aviremic macaques. Unlike untreated macaques, a treated macaque controlled viral replication and blocked CD4+ T cell depletion when challenged with a heterologus chimeric SIV/HIV-1 virus called SHIV(89.6P.) CONCLUSION: A single interruption plus one SIV(mne )challenge was as sufficient as six interruptions plus six SIV(mne )challenges in reducing efficacy of PMPA, but results in long-term persistence of virus infection suppressed by CD8+ cells. Efficacy of PMPA treatment was highest in macaques with pre-existing SIV immune responses. BioMed Central 2006-11-28 /pmc/articles/PMC1687192/ /pubmed/17132170 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-6405-3-29 Text en Copyright © 2006 Emau et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Emau, Peter
Jiang, Yonghou
Agy, Michael B
Tian, Baoping
Bekele, Girma
Tsai, Che-Chung
Post-exposure prophylaxis for SIV revisited: Animal model for HIV prevention
title Post-exposure prophylaxis for SIV revisited: Animal model for HIV prevention
title_full Post-exposure prophylaxis for SIV revisited: Animal model for HIV prevention
title_fullStr Post-exposure prophylaxis for SIV revisited: Animal model for HIV prevention
title_full_unstemmed Post-exposure prophylaxis for SIV revisited: Animal model for HIV prevention
title_short Post-exposure prophylaxis for SIV revisited: Animal model for HIV prevention
title_sort post-exposure prophylaxis for siv revisited: animal model for hiv prevention
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1687192/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17132170
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-6405-3-29
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