Hunter W D, Martuza R L, Feigenbaum F, Todo T, Mineta T, Yazaki T, Toda M, Newsome J T, Platenberg R C, Manz H J, Rabkin S D
Departments of Neurosurgery, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, D.C. 20007, USA.
J Virol. 1999 Aug;73(8):6319-26. doi: 10.1128/JVI.73.8.6319-6326.1999.
This study examined the safety of intracerebral inoculation of G207, an attenuated, replication-competent herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) recombinant, in nonhuman primates. Sixteen New World owl monkeys (Aotus nancymae [karyotype 1, formerly believed to be A. trivirgatus]), known for their exquisite susceptibility to HSV-1 infection, were evaluated. Thirteen underwent intracerebral inoculation with G207 at doses of 10(7) or 10(9) PFU, two were vehicle inoculated, and one served as an infected wild-type control and received 10(3) PFU of HSV-1 strain F. HSV-1 strain F caused rapid mortality and symptoms consistent with HSV encephalitis, including fever, hemiparesis, meningitis, and hemorrhage in the basal ganglia. One year after G207 inoculation, seven of the animals were alive and exhibited no evidence of clinical complications. Three deaths resulted from nonneurologic causes unrelated to HSV infection, and three animals were sacrificed for histopathologic examination. Two animals were reinoculated with G207 (10(7) PFU) at the same stereotactic coordinates 1 year after the initial G207 inoculation. These animals were alive and healthy 2 years after the second inoculation. Cerebral magnetic resonance imaging studies performed both before and after G207 inoculation failed to reveal radiographic evidence of HSV-related sequelae. Despite the lack of outwardly observable HSV pathology, measurable increases in serum anti-HSV titers were detected. Histopathological examination of multiple organ tissues found no evidence of HSV-induced histopathology or dissemination. We conclude that intracerebral inoculation of up to 10(9) PFU of G207, well above the efficacious dose in mouse tumor studies, is safe and therefore appropriate for human clinical trials.
本研究检测了脑内接种G207(一种减毒的、具有复制能力的单纯疱疹病毒1型(HSV-1)重组体)在非人灵长类动物中的安全性。对16只以对HSV-1感染极为敏感而闻名的新大陆夜猴(南希夜猴[Aotus nancymae,核型1,以前认为是三色夜猴(A. trivirgatus)])进行了评估。13只动物接受了剂量为10⁷或10⁹ PFU的G207脑内接种,2只接种了赋形剂,1只作为感染野生型对照,接受了10³ PFU的HSV-1 F株。HSV-1 F株导致快速死亡,并出现与HSV脑炎一致的症状,包括发热、偏瘫、脑膜炎和基底神经节出血。G207接种1年后,7只动物存活,未表现出临床并发症的迹象。3只动物死于与HSV感染无关的非神经系统原因,3只动物被处死后进行组织病理学检查。2只动物在初次接种G207 1年后,于相同立体定向坐标处再次接种G207(10⁷ PFU)。第二次接种2年后,这些动物存活且健康。在G207接种前后进行的脑磁共振成像研究均未发现HSV相关后遗症的影像学证据。尽管缺乏明显可见的HSV病理学表现,但检测到血清抗HSV滴度有可测量的升高。对多个器官组织的组织病理学检查未发现HSV诱导的组织病理学或播散的证据。我们得出结论,脑内接种高达10⁹ PFU的G207是安全的,该剂量远高于小鼠肿瘤研究中的有效剂量,因此适合进行人体临床试验。