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Polyclonal HIV envelope-specific breast milk antibodies limit founder SHIV acquisition and cell-associated virus loads in infant rhesus monkeys.

Breast milk HIV-1 transmission is currently the predominant contributor to pediatric HIV infections. Yet, only ~10% of breastfeeding infants born to untreated HIV-infected mothers become infected. This study assessed the protective capacity of natural HIV envelope-specific antibodies isolated from m...

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Autores principales: Himes, Jonathon E., Goswami, Ria, Mangan, Riley J., Kumar, Amit, Jeffries, Thomas L., Eudailey, Joshua A., Heimsath, Holly, Nguyen, Quang N., Pollara, Justin, LaBranche, Celia, Chen, Meng, Vandergrift, Nathan A., Peacock, James W., Schiro, Faith, Midkiff, Cecily, Ferrari, Guido, Montefiori, David C., Alvarez-Hernandez, Xavier, Pyone Aye, Pyone, Permar, Sallie R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6420805/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30115994
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41385-018-0067-7
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author Himes, Jonathon E.
Goswami, Ria
Mangan, Riley J.
Kumar, Amit
Jeffries, Thomas L.
Eudailey, Joshua A.
Heimsath, Holly
Nguyen, Quang N.
Pollara, Justin
LaBranche, Celia
Chen, Meng
Vandergrift, Nathan A.
Peacock, James W.
Schiro, Faith
Midkiff, Cecily
Ferrari, Guido
Montefiori, David C.
Alvarez-Hernandez, Xavier
Pyone Aye, Pyone
Permar, Sallie R.
author_facet Himes, Jonathon E.
Goswami, Ria
Mangan, Riley J.
Kumar, Amit
Jeffries, Thomas L.
Eudailey, Joshua A.
Heimsath, Holly
Nguyen, Quang N.
Pollara, Justin
LaBranche, Celia
Chen, Meng
Vandergrift, Nathan A.
Peacock, James W.
Schiro, Faith
Midkiff, Cecily
Ferrari, Guido
Montefiori, David C.
Alvarez-Hernandez, Xavier
Pyone Aye, Pyone
Permar, Sallie R.
author_sort Himes, Jonathon E.
collection PubMed
description Breast milk HIV-1 transmission is currently the predominant contributor to pediatric HIV infections. Yet, only ~10% of breastfeeding infants born to untreated HIV-infected mothers become infected. This study assessed the protective capacity of natural HIV envelope-specific antibodies isolated from milk of HIV-infected women in an infant rhesus monkey (RM), tier 2 SHIV oral challenge model. To mimic placental and milk maternal antibody transfer, infant RMs were i.v. infused and orally treated at the time of challenge with a single weakly-neutralizing milk monoclonal antibody (mAb), a tri-mAb cocktail with weakly neutralizing and ADCC functionalities, or an anti-influenza control mAb. Of these groups, the fewest tri-mAb-treated infants had SHIV detectable in plasma or tissues (2/6, 5/6, and 7/8 animals infected in tri-mAb, single-mAb, and control-mAb groups, respectively). Tri-mAb-treated infants demonstrated significantly fewer plasma transmitted/founder variants and reduced peripheral CD4+ T cell proviral loads at 8 weeks post-challenge compared to control mAb-treated infants. Abortive infection was observed as detectable CD4+ T cell provirus in non-viremic control mAb- and single mAb-, but not tri-mAb-treated animals. These results suggest that polyfunctional milk antibodies contribute to the natural inefficiency of HIV-1 transmission through breastfeeding and infant vaccinations eliciting non-neutralizing antibody responses could reduce postnatal HIV transmission.
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spelling pubmed-64208052019-03-16 Polyclonal HIV envelope-specific breast milk antibodies limit founder SHIV acquisition and cell-associated virus loads in infant rhesus monkeys. Himes, Jonathon E. Goswami, Ria Mangan, Riley J. Kumar, Amit Jeffries, Thomas L. Eudailey, Joshua A. Heimsath, Holly Nguyen, Quang N. Pollara, Justin LaBranche, Celia Chen, Meng Vandergrift, Nathan A. Peacock, James W. Schiro, Faith Midkiff, Cecily Ferrari, Guido Montefiori, David C. Alvarez-Hernandez, Xavier Pyone Aye, Pyone Permar, Sallie R. Mucosal Immunol Article Breast milk HIV-1 transmission is currently the predominant contributor to pediatric HIV infections. Yet, only ~10% of breastfeeding infants born to untreated HIV-infected mothers become infected. This study assessed the protective capacity of natural HIV envelope-specific antibodies isolated from milk of HIV-infected women in an infant rhesus monkey (RM), tier 2 SHIV oral challenge model. To mimic placental and milk maternal antibody transfer, infant RMs were i.v. infused and orally treated at the time of challenge with a single weakly-neutralizing milk monoclonal antibody (mAb), a tri-mAb cocktail with weakly neutralizing and ADCC functionalities, or an anti-influenza control mAb. Of these groups, the fewest tri-mAb-treated infants had SHIV detectable in plasma or tissues (2/6, 5/6, and 7/8 animals infected in tri-mAb, single-mAb, and control-mAb groups, respectively). Tri-mAb-treated infants demonstrated significantly fewer plasma transmitted/founder variants and reduced peripheral CD4+ T cell proviral loads at 8 weeks post-challenge compared to control mAb-treated infants. Abortive infection was observed as detectable CD4+ T cell provirus in non-viremic control mAb- and single mAb-, but not tri-mAb-treated animals. These results suggest that polyfunctional milk antibodies contribute to the natural inefficiency of HIV-1 transmission through breastfeeding and infant vaccinations eliciting non-neutralizing antibody responses could reduce postnatal HIV transmission. 2018-08-16 2018-11 /pmc/articles/PMC6420805/ /pubmed/30115994 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41385-018-0067-7 Text en http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use:http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Himes, Jonathon E.
Goswami, Ria
Mangan, Riley J.
Kumar, Amit
Jeffries, Thomas L.
Eudailey, Joshua A.
Heimsath, Holly
Nguyen, Quang N.
Pollara, Justin
LaBranche, Celia
Chen, Meng
Vandergrift, Nathan A.
Peacock, James W.
Schiro, Faith
Midkiff, Cecily
Ferrari, Guido
Montefiori, David C.
Alvarez-Hernandez, Xavier
Pyone Aye, Pyone
Permar, Sallie R.
Polyclonal HIV envelope-specific breast milk antibodies limit founder SHIV acquisition and cell-associated virus loads in infant rhesus monkeys.
title Polyclonal HIV envelope-specific breast milk antibodies limit founder SHIV acquisition and cell-associated virus loads in infant rhesus monkeys.
title_full Polyclonal HIV envelope-specific breast milk antibodies limit founder SHIV acquisition and cell-associated virus loads in infant rhesus monkeys.
title_fullStr Polyclonal HIV envelope-specific breast milk antibodies limit founder SHIV acquisition and cell-associated virus loads in infant rhesus monkeys.
title_full_unstemmed Polyclonal HIV envelope-specific breast milk antibodies limit founder SHIV acquisition and cell-associated virus loads in infant rhesus monkeys.
title_short Polyclonal HIV envelope-specific breast milk antibodies limit founder SHIV acquisition and cell-associated virus loads in infant rhesus monkeys.
title_sort polyclonal hiv envelope-specific breast milk antibodies limit founder shiv acquisition and cell-associated virus loads in infant rhesus monkeys.
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6420805/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30115994
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41385-018-0067-7
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