Division of Infectious Diseases and Hospital Epidemiology, University Hospital of Zurich, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
PLoS One. 2012;7(6):e38853. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0038853. Epub 2012 Jun 13.
Humanized mice generate a lymphoid system of human origin subsequent to transplantation of human CD34+ cells and thus are highly susceptible to HIV infection. Here we examined the efficacy of antiretroviral treatment (ART) when added to food pellets, and of long-acting (LA) antiretroviral compounds, either as monotherapy or in combination. These studies shall be inspiring for establishing a gold standard of ART, which is easy to administer and well supported by the mice, and for subsequent studies such as latency. Furthermore, they should disclose whether viral breakthrough and emergence of resistance occurs similar as in HIV-infected patients when ART is insufficient.
METHODS/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: NOD/shi-scid/γ(c)null (NOG) mice were used in all experimentations. We first performed pharmacokinetic studies of the drugs used, either added to food pellets (AZT, TDF, 3TC, RTV) or in a LA formulation that permitted once weekly subcutaneous administration (TMC278: non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor, TMC181: protease inhibitor). A combination of 3TC, TDF and TMC278-LA or 3TC, TDF, TMC278-LA and TMC181-LA suppressed the viral load to undetectable levels in 15/19 (79%) and 14/14 (100%) mice, respectively. In successfully treated mice, subsequent monotherapy with TMC278-LA resulted in viral breakthrough; in contrast, the two LA compounds together prevented viral breakthrough. Resistance mutations matched the mutations most commonly observed in HIV patients failing therapy. Importantly, viral rebound after interruption of ART, presence of HIV DNA in successfully treated mice and in vitro reactivation of early HIV transcripts point to an existing latent HIV reservoir.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: This report is a unique description of multiple aspects of HIV infection in humanized mice that comprised efficacy testing of various treatment regimens, including LA compounds, resistance mutation analysis as well as viral rebound after treatment interruption. Humanized mice will be highly valuable for exploring the antiviral potency of new compounds or compounds targeting the latent HIV reservoir.
经人 CD34+细胞移植后,人源化小鼠会产生类淋巴系统,因此极易感染 HIV。在此,我们研究了将抗逆转录病毒治疗(ART)添加到食物丸中以及长效(LA)抗逆转录病毒化合物作为单一疗法或联合疗法的疗效。这些研究将为建立易于管理且得到小鼠良好支持的 ART 金标准提供启示,并为后续研究(如潜伏期)提供启示。此外,它们应该揭示当 ART 不足时,病毒突破和耐药性的出现是否与 HIV 感染者相似。
方法/主要发现:所有实验均使用 NOD/shi-scid/γ(c)null(NOG)小鼠。我们首先对添加到食物丸中的药物(AZT、TDF、3TC、RTV)或允许每周一次皮下给药的 LA 制剂(非核苷类逆转录酶抑制剂 TMC278、蛋白酶抑制剂 TMC181)进行了药代动力学研究。3TC、TDF 和 TMC278-LA 的联合用药或 3TC、TDF、TMC278-LA 和 TMC181-LA 的联合用药分别使 19 只(79%)和 14 只(100%)小鼠的病毒载量降至不可检测水平。在成功治疗的小鼠中,随后用 TMC278-LA 进行单一疗法会导致病毒突破;相比之下,两种 LA 化合物联合使用可防止病毒突破。耐药突变与 HIV 患者治疗失败时最常见的突变相匹配。重要的是,ART 中断后病毒反弹、成功治疗的小鼠中存在 HIV DNA 和体外早期 HIV 转录本的重新激活表明存在潜伏的 HIV 储库。
结论/意义:本报告独特地描述了人源化小鼠中 HIV 感染的多个方面,包括各种治疗方案的疗效测试,包括 LA 化合物、耐药突变分析以及治疗中断后的病毒反弹。人源化小鼠对于探索新化合物或针对潜伏 HIV 储库的化合物的抗病毒效力将具有很高的价值。