Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology, Brigham Young University, Provo, UT 84602, USA.
Retrovirology. 2011 Aug 11;8:65. doi: 10.1186/1742-4690-8-65.
Substantial improvements have been made in recent years in the ability to engraft human cells and tissues into immunodeficient mice. The use of human hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) leads to multi-lineage human hematopoiesis accompanied by production of a variety of human immune cell types. Population of murine primary and secondary lymphoid organs with human cells occurs, and long-term engraftment has been achieved. Engrafted cells are capable of producing human innate and adaptive immune responses, making these models the most physiologically relevant humanized animal models to date. New models have been successfully infected by a variety of strains of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 (HIV-1), accompanied by virus replication in lymphoid and non-lymphoid organs, including the gut-associated lymphoid tissue, the male and female reproductive tracts, and the brain. Multiple forms of virus-induced pathogenesis are present, and human T cell and antibody responses to HIV-1 are detected. These humanized mice are susceptible to a high rate of rectal and vaginal transmission of HIV-1 across an intact epithelium, indicating the potential to study vaccines and microbicides. Antiviral drugs, siRNAs, and hematopoietic stem cell gene therapy strategies have all been shown to be effective at reducing viral load and preventing or reversing helper T cell loss in humanized mice, indicating that they will serve as an important preclinical model to study new therapeutic modalities. HIV-1 has also been shown to evolve in response to selective pressures in humanized mice, thus showing that the model will be useful to study and/or predict viral evolution in response to drug or immune pressures. The purpose of this review is to summarize the findings reported to date on all new humanized mouse models (those transplanted with human HSCs) in regards to HIV-1 sexual transmission, pathogenesis, anti-HIV-1 immune responses, viral evolution, pre- and post-exposure prophylaxis, and gene therapeutic strategies.
近年来,在将人类细胞和组织移植到免疫缺陷小鼠中的能力方面取得了实质性的进展。使用人类造血干细胞 (HSCs) 可导致多谱系人类造血,并产生各种人类免疫细胞类型。发生了鼠原代和次级淋巴器官的人类细胞定植,并且实现了长期定植。植入的细胞能够产生人类先天和适应性免疫反应,使这些模型成为迄今为止最具生理相关性的人源化动物模型。新模型已成功感染多种人类免疫缺陷病毒 1 型 (HIV-1) 株,伴随淋巴和非淋巴器官中的病毒复制,包括肠相关淋巴组织、男性和女性生殖道以及大脑。存在多种形式的病毒诱导的发病机制,并检测到人类 T 细胞和针对 HIV-1 的抗体反应。这些人源化小鼠易受完整上皮层的 HIV-1 直肠和阴道高传播率的影响,表明有可能研究疫苗和杀微生物剂。抗病毒药物、siRNA 和造血干细胞基因治疗策略已被证明可有效降低病毒载量并预防或逆转人源化小鼠中辅助性 T 细胞的损失,表明它们将作为研究新治疗方式的重要临床前模型。HIV-1 也已被证明会针对人源化小鼠中的选择压力而进化,因此表明该模型将有助于研究和/或预测药物或免疫压力下的病毒进化。本文综述了迄今为止报道的所有新的人源化小鼠模型(移植有人类 HSCs 的模型)在 HIV-1 性传播、发病机制、抗 HIV-1 免疫反应、病毒进化、暴露前和暴露后预防以及基因治疗策略方面的研究结果。