학술논문

Establishment of a Novel Humanized Mouse Model To Investigate In Vivo Activation and Depletion of Patient-Derived HIV Latent Reservoirs.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Virology. Mar2019, Vol. 93 Issue 6, p1-18. 18p.
Subject
*HIV-positive women
*VIRAL antibodies
*RESERVOIRS
*HIV
*HIV infections
Language
ISSN
0022-538X
Abstract
Curing HIV infection has been thwarted by the persistent reservoir of latently infected CD4+ T cells, which reinitiate systemic infection after antiretroviral therapy (ART) interruption. To evaluate reservoir depletion strategies, we developed a novel preclinical in vivo model consisting of immunodeficient mice intrasplenically injected with peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from long-term ART-suppressed HIV-infected donors. In the absence of ART, these mice developed rebound viremia which, 2 weeks after PBMC injection, was 1,000-fold higher (mean=9,229,281 HIV copies/ml) in mice injected intrasplenically than in mice injected intraperitoneally (mean=6,838 HIV copies/ml) or intravenously (mean=591 HIV copies/ml). One week after intrasplenic PBMC injection, in situ hybridization of the spleen demonstrated extensive disseminated HIV infection, likely initiated from in vivo-reactivated primary latently infected cells. The time to viremia was delayed significantly by treatment with a broadly neutralizing antibody, 10-1074, compared to treatment with 10-1074-FcRnull, suggesting that 10-1074 mobilized Fc-mediated effector mechanisms to deplete the replication-competent reservoir. This was supported by phylogenetic analysis of Env sequences from viral-outgrowth cultures and untreated, 10-1074-treated, or 10-1074-FcRnull-treated mice. The predominant sequence cluster detected in viral-outgrowth cultures and untreated mouse plasma was significantly reduced in the plasma of 10-1074-treated mice, whereas two new clusters emerged that were not detected in viral-outgrowth cultures or plasma from untreated mice. These new clusters lacked mutations associated with 10-1074 resistance. Taken together, these data indicated that 10-1074 treatment depletes the reservoir of latently infected cells harboring replication competent HIV. Furthermore, this mouse model represents a new in vivo approach for the preclinical evaluation of new HIV cure strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]