Yamamoto Nobuto, Ushijima Naofumi, Koga Yoshihiko
Division of Molecular Immunology and Immunotherapy, Socrates Institute for Therapeutic Immunology, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19126-3305, USA.
J Med Virol. 2009 Jan;81(1):16-26. doi: 10.1002/jmv.21376.
Serum Gc protein (known as vitamin D3-binding protein) is the precursor for the principal macrophage activating factor (MAF). The MAF precursor activity of serum Gc protein of HIV-infected patients was lost or reduced because Gc protein is deglycosylated by alpha-N-acetylgalactosaminidase (Nagalase) secreted from HIV-infected cells. Therefore, macrophages of HIV-infected patients having deglycosylated Gc protein cannot be activated, leading to immunosuppression. Since Nagalase is the intrinsic component of the envelope protein gp120, serum Nagalase activity is the sum of enzyme activities carried by both HIV virions and envelope proteins. These Nagalase carriers were already complexed with anti-HIV immunoglobulin G (IgG) but retained Nagalase activity that is required for infectivity. Stepwise treatment of purified Gc protein with immobilized beta-galactosidase and sialidase generated the most potent macrophage activating factor (termed GcMAF), which produces no side effects in humans. Macrophages activated by administration of 100 ng GcMAF develop a large amount of Fc-receptors as well as an enormous variation of receptors that recognize IgG-bound and unbound HIV virions. Since latently HIV-infected cells are unstable and constantly release HIV virions, the activated macrophages rapidly intercept the released HIV virions to prevent reinfection resulting in exhaustion of infected cells. After less than 18 weekly administrations of 100 ng GcMAF for nonanemic patients, they exhibited low serum Nagalase activities equivalent to healthy controls, indicating eradication of HIV-infection, which was also confirmed by no infectious center formation by provirus inducing agent-treated patient PBMCs. No recurrence occurred and their healthy CD + cell counts were maintained for 7 years.
血清Gc蛋白(也称为维生素D3结合蛋白)是主要巨噬细胞激活因子(MAF)的前体。由于HIV感染细胞分泌的α-N-乙酰半乳糖胺酶(Nagalase)会使Gc蛋白去糖基化,HIV感染患者血清Gc蛋白的MAF前体活性丧失或降低。因此,具有去糖基化Gc蛋白的HIV感染患者的巨噬细胞无法被激活,从而导致免疫抑制。由于Nagalase是包膜蛋白gp120的固有成分,血清Nagalase活性是HIV病毒粒子和包膜蛋白所携带酶活性的总和。这些Nagalase载体已经与抗HIV免疫球蛋白G(IgG)结合,但仍保留感染性所需的Nagalase活性。用固定化β-半乳糖苷酶和唾液酸酶对纯化的Gc蛋白进行逐步处理,产生了最有效的巨噬细胞激活因子(称为GcMAF),该因子在人体中无副作用。通过给予100 ng GcMAF激活的巨噬细胞会产生大量的Fc受体以及识别结合和未结合IgG的HIV病毒粒子的多种受体。由于潜伏感染HIV的细胞不稳定并不断释放HIV病毒粒子,激活的巨噬细胞会迅速拦截释放的HIV病毒粒子,以防止再次感染,从而导致感染细胞耗尽。对于非贫血患者,在每周给予100 ng GcMAF少于18次后,他们的血清Nagalase活性较低,与健康对照相当,表明HIV感染已被根除,这也通过经前病毒诱导剂处理的患者外周血单核细胞未形成感染中心得到证实。没有复发,他们的健康CD +细胞计数维持了7年。