HIV Replication and Latency in a Humanized NSG Mouse Model during Suppressive Oral Combinational Antiretroviral Therapy

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: HIV Replication and Latency in a Humanized NSG Mouse Model during Suppressive Oral Combinational Antiretroviral Therapy
المؤلفون: Shiny Xiaqin Wu, Mayumi Takahashi, Shasha Li, John C. Burnett, Jiehua Zhou, Sangeetha Satheesan, Timothy W. Synold, John J. Rossi, Haitang Li
المساهمون: Silvestri, Guido
المصدر: Journal of virology, vol 92, iss 7
بيانات النشر: eScholarship, University of California, 2018.
سنة النشر: 2018
مصطلحات موضوعية: 0301 basic medicine, Cellular Response to Infection, Administration, Oral, HIV Infections, Mice, SCID, Virus Replication, Medical and Health Sciences, Mice, Stem Cell Research - Nonembryonic - Human, Mice, Inbred NOD, Virus latency, 2.1 Biological and endogenous factors, Aetiology, suppressive HIV, virus diseases, Biological Sciences, Human Fetal Tissue, Virus Latency, Haematopoiesis, Infectious Diseases, medicine.anatomical_structure, Anti-Retroviral Agents, Administration, NSG mouse, HIV/AIDS, Infection, Oral, 030106 microbiology, Immunology, oral antiretroviral therapy, humanized NSG mouse model, Viremia, Biology, SCID, Microbiology, combinatorial ART, 03 medical and health sciences, Immune system, HIV latency and persistence, In vivo, Virology, medicine, Animals, Latency (engineering), Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences, Animal, Stem Cell Research, medicine.disease, Disease Models, Animal, 030104 developmental biology, Insect Science, Disease Models, HIV-1, Inbred NOD, Bone marrow
الوصف: Although current combinatorial antiretroviral therapy (cART) is therapeutically effective in the majority of HIV patients, interruption of therapy can cause a rapid rebound in viremia, demonstrating the existence of a stable reservoir of latently infected cells. HIV latency is therefore considered a primary barrier to HIV eradication. Identifying, quantifying, and purging the HIV reservoir is crucial to effectively curing patients and relieving them from the lifelong requirement for therapy. Latently infected transformed cell models have been used to investigate HIV latency; however, these models cannot accurately represent the quiescent cellular environment of primary latently infected cells in vivo . For this reason, in vivo humanized murine models have been developed for screening antiviral agents, identifying latently infected T cells, and establishing treatment approaches for HIV research. Such models include humanized bone marrow/liver/thymus mice and SCID-hu-thy/liv mice, which are repopulated with human immune cells and implanted human tissues through laborious surgical manipulation. However, no one has utilized the human hematopoietic stem cell-engrafted NOD/SCID/IL2rγ null (NSG) model (hu-NSG) for this purpose. Therefore, in the present study, we used the HIV-infected hu-NSG mouse to recapitulate the key aspects of HIV infection and pathogenesis in vivo . Moreover, we evaluated the ability of HIV-infected human cells isolated from HIV-infected hu-NSG mice on suppressive cART to act as a latent HIV reservoir. Our results demonstrate that the hu-NSG model is an effective surgery-free in vivo system in which to efficiently evaluate HIV replication, antiretroviral therapy, latency and persistence, and eradication interventions. IMPORTANCE HIV can establish a stably integrated, nonproductive state of infection at the level of individual cells, known as HIV latency, which is considered a primary barrier to curing HIV. A complete understanding of the establishment and role of HIV latency in vivo would greatly enhance attempts to develop novel HIV purging strategies. An ideal animal model for this purpose should be easy to work with, should have a shortened disease course so that efficacy testing can be completed in a reasonable time, and should have immune correlates that are easily translatable to humans. We therefore describe a novel application of the hematopoietic stem cell-transplanted humanized NSG model for dynamically testing antiretroviral treatment, supporting HIV infection, establishing HIV latency in vivo . The hu-NSG model could be a facile alternative to humanized bone marrow/liver/thymus or SCID-hu-thy/liv mice in which laborious surgical manipulation and time-consuming human cell reconstitution is required.
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::5f01ab1cd1a82e286f656bbf99a4def4
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/94f508p9
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.doi.dedup.....5f01ab1cd1a82e286f656bbf99a4def4
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE