Division of HIV/AIDS Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2011 Apr 26;6(4):e19295. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0019295.
Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) with anti-viral drugs is currently in clinical trials for the prevention of HIV infection. Induction of adaptive immune responses to virus exposures during anti-viral drug administration, i.e., a "chemo-vaccination" effect, could contribute to PrEP efficacy. To study possible chemo-vaccination, we monitored humoral and cellular immune responses in nine rhesus macaques undergoing up to 14 weekly, low-dose SHIV(SF162P3) rectal exposures. Six macaques concurrently received PrEP with intermittent, oral Truvada; three were no-PrEP controls. PrEP protected 4 macaques from infection. Two of the four showed evidence of chemo-vaccination, because they developed anti-SHIV CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells; SHIV-specific antibodies were not detected. Control macaques showed no anti-SHIV immune responses before infection. Chemo-vaccination-induced T cell responses were robust (up to 3,940 SFU/10(6) PBMCs), predominantly central memory cells, short-lived (≤22 weeks), and appeared intermittently and with changing specificities. The two chemo-vaccinated macaques were virus-challenged again after 28 weeks of rest, after T cell responses had waned. One macaque was not protected from infection. The other macaque concurrently received additional PrEP. It remained uninfected and T cell responses were boosted during the additional virus exposures. In summary, we document and characterize PrEP-induced T cell chemo-vaccination. Although not protective after subsiding in one macaque, chemo-vaccination-induced T cells warrant more comprehensive analysis during peak responses for their ability to prevent or to control infections after additional exposures. Our findings highlight the importance of monitoring these responses in clinical PrEP trials and suggest that a combination of vaccines and PrEP potentially might enhance efficacy.
暴露前预防(PrEP)用抗病毒药物目前正在临床试验中,用于预防 HIV 感染。在抗病毒药物给药期间诱导针对病毒暴露的适应性免疫反应,即“化学疫苗接种”效应,可能有助于 PrEP 的疗效。为了研究可能的化学疫苗接种,我们监测了九只恒河猴在接受长达 14 周的每周低剂量 SHIV(SF162P3)直肠暴露期间的体液和细胞免疫反应。六只猴子同时接受间歇性口服 Truvada 的 PrEP;三只猴子作为无 PrEP 对照组。PrEP 保护了 4 只猴子免受感染。在这 4 只猴子中,有 2 只表现出化学疫苗接种的证据,因为它们产生了抗 SHIV 的 CD4(+)和 CD8(+)T 细胞;未检测到 SHIV 特异性抗体。感染前,对照猴子没有抗 SHIV 的免疫反应。化学疫苗接种诱导的 T 细胞反应非常强烈(高达 3940SFU/10(6)PBMC),主要是中央记忆细胞,寿命短(≤22 周),并且表现出间歇性和特异性变化。在 T 细胞反应减弱 28 周后,这两只接受化学疫苗接种的猴子再次接受病毒挑战。一只猴子没有免受感染。另一只猴子同时接受了额外的 PrEP。它仍然没有被感染,并且在额外的病毒暴露期间,T 细胞反应得到了增强。总之,我们记录和描述了 PrEP 诱导的 T 细胞化学疫苗接种。尽管在一只猴子中消退后没有保护作用,但化学疫苗接种诱导的 T 细胞值得在峰值反应期间进行更全面的分析,以评估其在额外暴露后预防或控制感染的能力。我们的发现强调了在临床 PrEP 试验中监测这些反应的重要性,并表明疫苗和 PrEP 的联合使用可能增强疗效。