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Studies of HIV Eradication: a Case for Using NHP Models. Guido Silvestri, MD Yerkes National Primate Research Center Emory University School of Medicine Emory Center for AIDS Research (CFAR) Emory Vaccine Center. Similarities between HIV & pathogenic SIV infection of macaques.
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Studies of HIV Eradication:a Case for Using NHP Models Guido Silvestri, MD Yerkes National Primate Research Center Emory University School of Medicine Emory Center for AIDS Research (CFAR) Emory Vaccine Center
Similarities between HIV & pathogenic SIV infection of macaques Chronic progressive infection associated with opportunistic infections and CNS disease (simian AIDS). Instances of “benign” cases (LTNP, EC) associated with low viremia and specific MHC Class-I alleles. Kinetics of viremia characterized by acute peak and post-peak decline. Presence of vigorous but ultimately ineffective innate and adaptive immune responses to the virus. Key pathogenic events include chronic immune activation, mucosal immune dysfunction, microbial translocation, and high levels of infection of central-memory CD4+ T cells. Virus replication can be suppressed by ART with persisting reservoirs of latently infected cells. Perhaps the best animal model available for any human disease?
Historical Results Studies of the very early events of virus transmission and dissemination. Detailed immunological and virological analyses of the acute phase of infection. Characterization of the basic pathogenic events in tissues. Definition of the in vivo role of specific viral proteins (i.e. delta Nef viruses etc) Assessment of the role of the host immune response in controlling virus replication by using “depletion” techniques. Studies of pathogenesis using “invasive” techniques (i.e., repeated tissue sampling, cell labeling techniques, etc). Pre-clinical testing of candidate AIDS vaccines, microbicides, and antiretroviral strategies. The model is vastly under-utilized for studies of HIV eradication
Opportunities provided by the NHP models in studies of HIV eradication Extensive characterization of the virus in tissues (including elective necropsy). Pilot trials of in vivo eradication conducted in a timely and controlled fashion. Testing of “risky” interventions (i.e., cell depletion experiments, stem cell-based interventions etc) Control for various clinical parameters that are virtually impossible to control in humans (time of infection, duration of ART etc). Currently, key limitations to this type of studies are their cost and the lack of standardized resources.
Do we need a standardized NHP resource? Currently every investigators who wishes to study HIV eradication in NHPs has to build (or even invent) her/his own resource– this situation may discourage scientists to get into “eradication” work in primates. Standardizing the model(s) in terms of species, virus, type and timing of treatment, assays, veterinarian techniques, etc., may allow for better comparison between proposed interventions. A standardized NHP resource could also save money due to simple economy of scale. What NHP model should be used?
Rhesus Macaque Models of HIV Infection From Ruprecht R. and Silvestri G, CurrOpinVirol, in press