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Post-Infection Immunodeficiency Virus Control by Neutralizing Antibodies

BACKGROUND: Unlike most acute viral infections controlled with the appearance of virus-specific neutralizing antibodies (NAbs), primary HIV infections are not met with such potent and early antibody responses. This brings into question if or how the presence of potent antibodies can contribute to pr...

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Autores principales: Yamamoto, Hiroyuki, Kawada, Miki, Takeda, Akiko, Igarashi, Hiroko, Matano, Tetsuro
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1890307/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17579714
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000540
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author Yamamoto, Hiroyuki
Kawada, Miki
Takeda, Akiko
Igarashi, Hiroko
Matano, Tetsuro
author_facet Yamamoto, Hiroyuki
Kawada, Miki
Takeda, Akiko
Igarashi, Hiroko
Matano, Tetsuro
author_sort Yamamoto, Hiroyuki
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Unlike most acute viral infections controlled with the appearance of virus-specific neutralizing antibodies (NAbs), primary HIV infections are not met with such potent and early antibody responses. This brings into question if or how the presence of potent antibodies can contribute to primary HIV control, but protective efficacies of antiviral antibodies in primary HIV infections have remained elusive; and, it has been speculated that even NAb induction could have only a limited suppressive effect on primary HIV replication once infection is established. Here, in an attempt to answer this question, we examined the effect of passive NAb immunization post-infection on primary viral replication in a macaque AIDS model. METHODS AND FINDINGS: The inoculums for passive immunization with simian immunodeficiency virus mac239 (SIVmac239)-specific neutralizing activity were prepared by purifying polyclonal immunoglobulin G from pooled plasma of six SIVmac239-infected rhesus macaques with NAb induction in the chronic phase. Passive immunization of rhesus macaques with the NAbs at day 7 after SIVmac239 challenge resulted in significant reduction of set-point plasma viral loads and preservation of central memory CD4 T lymphocyte counts, despite the limited detection period of the administered NAb responses. Peripheral lymph node dendritic cell (DC)-associated viral RNA loads showed a remarkable peak with the NAb administration, and DCs stimulated in vitro with NAb-preincubated SIV activated virus-specific CD4 T lymphocytes in an Fc-dependent manner, implying antibody-mediated virion uptake by DCs and enhanced T cell priming. CONCLUSIONS: Our results present evidence indicating that potent antibody induction post-infection can result in primary immunodeficiency virus control and suggest direct and indirect contribution of its absence to initial control failure in HIV infections. Although difficulty in achieving requisite neutralizing titers for sterile HIV protection by prophylactic vaccination has been suggested, this study points out a possibility of non-sterile HIV control by prophylactic vaccine-induced, sub-sterile titers of NAbs post-infection, providing a rationale of vaccine-based NAb induction for primary HIV control.
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spelling pubmed-18903072007-06-20 Post-Infection Immunodeficiency Virus Control by Neutralizing Antibodies Yamamoto, Hiroyuki Kawada, Miki Takeda, Akiko Igarashi, Hiroko Matano, Tetsuro PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Unlike most acute viral infections controlled with the appearance of virus-specific neutralizing antibodies (NAbs), primary HIV infections are not met with such potent and early antibody responses. This brings into question if or how the presence of potent antibodies can contribute to primary HIV control, but protective efficacies of antiviral antibodies in primary HIV infections have remained elusive; and, it has been speculated that even NAb induction could have only a limited suppressive effect on primary HIV replication once infection is established. Here, in an attempt to answer this question, we examined the effect of passive NAb immunization post-infection on primary viral replication in a macaque AIDS model. METHODS AND FINDINGS: The inoculums for passive immunization with simian immunodeficiency virus mac239 (SIVmac239)-specific neutralizing activity were prepared by purifying polyclonal immunoglobulin G from pooled plasma of six SIVmac239-infected rhesus macaques with NAb induction in the chronic phase. Passive immunization of rhesus macaques with the NAbs at day 7 after SIVmac239 challenge resulted in significant reduction of set-point plasma viral loads and preservation of central memory CD4 T lymphocyte counts, despite the limited detection period of the administered NAb responses. Peripheral lymph node dendritic cell (DC)-associated viral RNA loads showed a remarkable peak with the NAb administration, and DCs stimulated in vitro with NAb-preincubated SIV activated virus-specific CD4 T lymphocytes in an Fc-dependent manner, implying antibody-mediated virion uptake by DCs and enhanced T cell priming. CONCLUSIONS: Our results present evidence indicating that potent antibody induction post-infection can result in primary immunodeficiency virus control and suggest direct and indirect contribution of its absence to initial control failure in HIV infections. Although difficulty in achieving requisite neutralizing titers for sterile HIV protection by prophylactic vaccination has been suggested, this study points out a possibility of non-sterile HIV control by prophylactic vaccine-induced, sub-sterile titers of NAbs post-infection, providing a rationale of vaccine-based NAb induction for primary HIV control. Public Library of Science 2007-06-20 /pmc/articles/PMC1890307/ /pubmed/17579714 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000540 Text en Yamamoto et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Yamamoto, Hiroyuki
Kawada, Miki
Takeda, Akiko
Igarashi, Hiroko
Matano, Tetsuro
Post-Infection Immunodeficiency Virus Control by Neutralizing Antibodies
title Post-Infection Immunodeficiency Virus Control by Neutralizing Antibodies
title_full Post-Infection Immunodeficiency Virus Control by Neutralizing Antibodies
title_fullStr Post-Infection Immunodeficiency Virus Control by Neutralizing Antibodies
title_full_unstemmed Post-Infection Immunodeficiency Virus Control by Neutralizing Antibodies
title_short Post-Infection Immunodeficiency Virus Control by Neutralizing Antibodies
title_sort post-infection immunodeficiency virus control by neutralizing antibodies
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1890307/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17579714
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000540
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