Noecker Cecilia, Schaefer Krista, Zaccheo Kelly, Yang Yiding, Day Judy, Ganusov Vitaly V
National institute for Mathematical and Biological synthesis (NIMBioS), Knoxville, TN 37996, USA.
Department of Genome Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
Viruses. 2015 Mar 13;7(3):1189-217. doi: 10.3390/v7031189.
Upon infection of a new host, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) replicates in the mucosal tissues and is generally undetectable in circulation for 1-2 weeks post-infection. Several interventions against HIV including vaccines and antiretroviral prophylaxis target virus replication at this earliest stage of infection. Mathematical models have been used to understand how HIV spreads from mucosal tissues systemically and what impact vaccination and/or antiretroviral prophylaxis has on viral eradication. Because predictions of such models have been rarely compared to experimental data, it remains unclear which processes included in these models are critical for predicting early HIV dynamics. Here we modified the "standard" mathematical model of HIV infection to include two populations of infected cells: cells that are actively producing the virus and cells that are transitioning into virus production mode. We evaluated the effects of several poorly known parameters on infection outcomes in this model and compared model predictions to experimental data on infection of non-human primates with variable doses of simian immunodifficiency virus (SIV). First, we found that the mode of virus production by infected cells (budding vs. bursting) has a minimal impact on the early virus dynamics for a wide range of model parameters, as long as the parameters are constrained to provide the observed rate of SIV load increase in the blood of infected animals. Interestingly and in contrast with previous results, we found that the bursting mode of virus production generally results in a higher probability of viral extinction than the budding mode of virus production. Second, this mathematical model was not able to accurately describe the change in experimentally determined probability of host infection with increasing viral doses. Third and finally, the model was also unable to accurately explain the decline in the time to virus detection with increasing viral dose. These results suggest that, in order to appropriately model early HIV/SIV dynamics, additional factors must be considered in the model development. These may include variability in monkey susceptibility to infection, within-host competition between different viruses for target cells at the initial site of virus replication in the mucosa, innate immune response, and possibly the inclusion of several different tissue compartments. The sobering news is that while an increase in model complexity is needed to explain the available experimental data, testing and rejection of more complex models may require more quantitative data than is currently available.
在感染新宿主后,人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)在黏膜组织中复制,感染后1至2周内通常在循环系统中检测不到。包括疫苗和抗逆转录病毒预防在内的几种针对HIV的干预措施都针对感染的这一最早阶段的病毒复制。数学模型已被用于了解HIV如何从黏膜组织全身性传播,以及疫苗接种和/或抗逆转录病毒预防对病毒根除有何影响。由于此类模型的预测很少与实验数据进行比较,因此尚不清楚这些模型中包含的哪些过程对于预测早期HIV动态至关重要。在此,我们修改了HIV感染的“标准”数学模型,纳入两类受感染细胞群体:正在积极产生病毒的细胞和正在转变为病毒产生模式的细胞。我们评估了该模型中几个鲜为人知的参数对感染结果的影响,并将模型预测与用不同剂量猿猴免疫缺陷病毒(SIV)感染非人灵长类动物的实验数据进行了比较。首先,我们发现,只要参数被限制在能提供受感染动物血液中观察到的SIV载量增加速率的范围内,受感染细胞产生病毒的模式(出芽与裂解)在广泛的模型参数范围内对早期病毒动态的影响极小。有趣的是,与之前的结果相反,我们发现病毒产生的裂解模式通常比出芽模式导致病毒灭绝的概率更高。其次,这个数学模型无法准确描述实验确定的宿主感染概率随病毒剂量增加的变化。第三也是最后一点,该模型也无法准确解释随着病毒剂量增加病毒检测时间的缩短。这些结果表明,为了恰当地模拟早期HIV/SIV动态,在模型开发中必须考虑其他因素。这些因素可能包括猴子对感染易感性的差异、黏膜中病毒复制初始部位不同病毒对靶细胞的体内竞争、先天免疫反应,以及可能纳入几个不同的组织区室。令人清醒的消息是,虽然需要增加模型复杂性来解释现有实验数据,但测试和否定更复杂的模型可能需要比目前可用的更多定量数据。