SHIV Infection Protects Against Heterologous Pathogenic SHIV Challenge in Macaques: A Gold-Standard for HIV-1 Vaccine Development?

被引:10
|
作者
Sealy, Robert [1 ,2 ]
Zhan, Xiaoyan [1 ]
Lockey, Timothy D. [2 ]
Martin, Louis [3 ]
Blanchard, James [3 ]
Traina-Dorge, Vicki [3 ]
Hurwitz, Julia L. [1 ,2 ,4 ]
机构
[1] St Jude Childrens Res Hosp, Dept Infect Dis, Memphis, TN 38105 USA
[2] St Jude Childrens Res Hosp, Dept Immunol, Memphis, TN 38105 USA
[3] Tulane Natl Primate Res Ctr, Covington, LA USA
[4] Univ Tennessee, Dept Pathol, Memphis, TN USA
关键词
Rhesus macaques; Protective immunity; SHIV; Neutralization; Vaccine; HUMAN-IMMUNODEFICIENCY-VIRUS; RHESUS MACAQUES; IN-VIVO; NEUTRALIZING ANTIBODIES; MULTI-ENVELOPE; ATTENUATED SIV; TYPE-1; SUPERINFECTION; MONOCLONAL-ANTIBODIES; LONGITUDINAL ANALYSIS; PASSIVE-IMMUNIZATION;
D O I
10.2174/157016209789346255
中图分类号
R392 [医学免疫学]; Q939.91 [免疫学];
学科分类号
100102 ;
摘要
A current debate in the HIV-1 vaccine field concerns the ability of an immunodeficiency virus to elicit a protective response. One argument is that HIV-1 superinfections are frequent in healthy individuals, because virus evades conventional immune surveillance, a serious obstacle to vaccine design. The opposing argument is that protection from superinfection is significant, reflecting a robust immune response that might be harnessed by vaccination to prevent disease. In an experiment designed to address the debate, two macaques received an I. V. inoculation with SHIV KU-1-d (a derivative of SHIV KU-1) and were rested for >= 10 months. Infection elicited diverse neutralizing antibody activities in both animals. Animals were then exposed to SHIV 89.6P (I. V.), a virus carrying a heterologous envelope protein relative to the vaccine strain. Infection was monitored by viral load and CD4+ T-cell measurements. All control animals were infected and most succumbed to disease. In contrast, protection from superinfection was statistically significant in test monkeys; one animal showed no evidence of superinfection at any time point and the second showed evidence of virus at only one time point over a 6-month observation period. Neither animal showed signs of disease. Perhaps this protective state may serve as a 'gold-standard' for HIV-1 vaccine development, as a similar degree of protection against immunodeficiency virus infections in humans would be much desired.
引用
收藏
页码:497 / 503
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Immune Control of SHIV Infection in Rhesus Macaques by PD-1-based Vaccine
    Wong, Yik Chun
    Liu, Wan
    Li, Xin
    Niu, Mengyue
    Du, Yanhua
    Chen, Samantha M. Y.
    Tian, Shoulong
    Cheng, Lin
    Tang, Xian
    Wang, Hui
    Zhang, Haoji
    Chen, Zhiwei
    AIDS RESEARCH AND HUMAN RETROVIRUSES, 2018, 34 : 44 - 44
  • [32] Neuroinflammation and CNS HIV-1 establishment following mucosal SHIV transmission in rhesus macaques
    Elizaldi, Sonny R.
    Beckman, Danielle
    Ott, Sean
    Verma, Anil
    Schmidt, Brian A.
    Nguyen, Nancy N.
    Lakshmanappa, Yashavanth S.
    Morrison, John H.
    Iyer, Smita S.
    JOURNAL OF MEDICAL PRIMATOLOGY, 2020, 49 (05) : 255 - 256
  • [33] Control of SHIV-89.6P-infection of cynomolgus monkeys by HIV-1 Tat protein vaccine
    Aurelio Cafaro
    Antonella Caputo
    Claudio Fracasso
    Maria T. Maggiorella
    Delia Goletti
    Silvia Baroncelli
    Monica Pace
    Leonardo Sernicola
    Martin L. Koanga-Mogtomo
    Monica Betti
    Alessandra Borsetti
    Roberto Belli
    Lennart Åkerblom
    Franco Corrias
    Stefano Buttò
    Jonathan Heeney
    Paola Verani
    Fausto Titti
    Barbara Ensoli
    Nature Medicine, 1999, 5 : 643 - 650
  • [34] Cerebrospinal fluid CD4+T cell infection in humans and macaques during acute HIV-1 and SHIV infection
    Sharma, Vishakha
    Creegan, Matthew
    Tokarev, Andrey
    Hsu, Denise
    Slike, Bonnie M.
    Sacdalan, Carlo
    Chan, Phillip
    Spudich, Serena
    Ananworanich, Jintanat
    Eller, Michael A.
    Krebs, Shelly J.
    Vasan, Sandhya
    Bolton, Diane L.
    PLOS PATHOGENS, 2021, 17 (12)
  • [35] Protection of macaques against vaginal SHIV challenge by systemic or mucosal and systemic vaccinations with HIV-envelope
    Barnetta, Susan W.
    Srivastava, Indresh K.
    Kan, Elaine
    Zhou, Fengmin
    Goodsell, Amanda
    Cristillo, Anthony D.
    Ferrai, Maria Grazia
    Weiss, Deborah E.
    Letvin, Norman L.
    Montefiori, David
    Pal, Ranajit
    Vajdy, Michael
    AIDS, 2008, 22 (03) : 339 - 348
  • [36] Control of SHIV-89.6P-infection of cynomolgus monkeys by HIV-1 Tat protein vaccine
    Cafaro, A
    Caputo, A
    Fracasso, C
    Maggiorella, MT
    Goletti, D
    Baroncelli, S
    Pace, M
    Sernicola, L
    Koanga-Mogtomo, ML
    Betti, M
    Borsetti, A
    Belli, R
    Åkerblom, L
    Corrias, F
    Buttò, S
    Heeney, J
    Verani, P
    Titti, F
    Ensoli, B
    NATURE MEDICINE, 1999, 5 (06) : 643 - 650
  • [37] Novel V1 deleted-envelope vaccine based on VLP protects against SHIV infection
    de Castro, I. Silva
    Rahman, A. M.
    Bissa, M.
    Stamos, J. D.
    Sarkis, S.
    Doster, M.
    Gutowska, A.
    N'guessan, K.
    Paquin-Proulx, D.
    Cardozo, T.
    Franchini, G.
    JOURNAL OF THE INTERNATIONAL AIDS SOCIETY, 2023, 26
  • [38] Protection of rhesus macaques against disease progression from pathogenic SHIV-89.6PD by vaccination with phage-displayed HIV-1 epitopes
    Xueni Chen
    Giuseppe Scala
    Ileana Quinto
    Weimin Liu
    Tae-Wook Chun
    J. Shawn Justement
    Oren J. Cohen
    Tom C. vanCott
    Marcin Iwanicki
    Mark G. Lewis
    Jack Greenhouse
    Todd Barry
    David Venzon
    Anthony S. Fauci
    Nature Medicine, 2001, 7 : 1225 - 1231
  • [39] Protection of rhesus macaques against disease progression from pathogenic SHIV-89.6PD by vaccination with phage-displayed HIV-1 epitopes
    Chen, XN
    Scala, G
    Quinto, I
    Liu, WM
    Chun, TW
    Justement, JS
    Cohen, OJ
    vanCott, TC
    Iwanicki, M
    Lewis, MG
    Greenhouse, J
    Barry, T
    Venzon, D
    Fauci, AS
    NATURE MEDICINE, 2001, 7 (11) : 1225 - 1231
  • [40] Immunization with Recombinant HLA Classes I and II, HIV-1 gp140, and SIV p27 Elicits Protection against Heterologous SHIV Infection in Rhesus Macaques
    Morner, Andreas
    Jansson, Marianne
    Bunnik, Evelien M.
    Scholler, Jorgen
    Vaughan, Robert
    Wang, Yufei
    Montefiori, David C.
    Otting, Nel
    Bontrop, Ronald
    Bergmeier, Lesley A.
    Singh, Mahavir
    Wyatt, Richard T.
    Schuitemaker, Hanneke
    Biberfeld, Gunnel
    Thorstensson, Rigmor
    Lehner, Thomas
    JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY, 2011, 85 (13) : 6442 - 6452