Veazey Ronald S, Lackner Andrew A
Division of Comparative Pathology, Tulane National Primate Research Center, Tulane University School of Medicine.
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Tulane University School of Medicine.
ILAR J. 2017 Dec 1;58(2):160-171. doi: 10.1093/ilar/ilx032.
Research using nonhuman primates (NHPs) as models for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) has resulted in tremendous achievements not only in the prevention and treatment of HIV, but also in biomedical research more broadly. Once considered a death sentence, HIV infection is now fairly well controlled with combination antiretroviral treatments, almost all of which were first tested for efficacy and safety in nonhuman primates or other laboratory animals. Research in NHP has led to "dogma changing" discoveries in immunology, infectious disease, and even our own genetics. We now know that many of our genes are retroviral remnants, or developed in response to archaic HIV-like retroviral infections. Early studies involving blood from HIV patients and in experiments in cultured tissues contributed to confusion regarding the cause of AIDS and impeded progress in the development of effective interventions. Research on the many retroviruses of different NHP species have broadened our understanding of human immunology and perhaps even our origins and evolution as a species. In combination with recent advances in molecular biology and computational analytics, research in NHPs has unique potential for discoveries that will directly lead to new cures for old human and animal diseases, including HIV/AIDS.
使用非人灵长类动物(NHPs)作为人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)感染和获得性免疫缺陷综合征(AIDS)模型的研究,不仅在HIV的预防和治疗方面取得了巨大成就,而且在更广泛的生物医学研究中也成果斐然。HIV感染曾经被视为死刑判决,如今通过联合抗逆转录病毒疗法已得到相当有效的控制,几乎所有这些疗法最初都是在非人灵长类动物或其他实验动物身上进行疗效和安全性测试的。对非人灵长类动物的研究在免疫学、传染病乃至我们自身的遗传学领域都带来了“改变教条”的发现。我们现在知道,我们的许多基因都是逆转录病毒的残余物,或者是在应对古老的类似HIV的逆转录病毒感染时产生的。早期涉及HIV患者血液的研究以及在培养组织中的实验,导致了对AIDS病因的困惑,并阻碍了有效干预措施开发的进展。对不同非人灵长类动物物种的多种逆转录病毒的研究,拓宽了我们对人类免疫学的理解,甚至可能加深了我们对作为一个物种的起源和进化的认识。与分子生物学和计算分析的最新进展相结合,对非人灵长类动物的研究具有独特的潜力,有望直接促成针对人类和动物的旧疾病(包括HIV/AIDS)的新疗法。