Johnson C M, Selleseth D W, Ellis M N, Childers T A, Tompkins M B, Tompkins W A
Department of Microbiology, Pathology, College of Veterinary Medicine, North Carolina State University, Raleigh 27606, USA.
Vet Immunol Immunopathol. 1995 May;46(1-2):169-80. doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(94)07016-z.
The lack of a safe, economical murine lentivirus model for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection of humans has hampered the preclinical evaluation of potential antiviral compounds, vaccines, and biological response modifiers. A small animal model that does not employ HIV-1 is needed to minimize risk of accidental human exposure, enhance efficient use of scarce experimental compounds, and reduce laboratory space necessary to conduct statistically significant in vivo trials. Feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV), an immunosuppressive lentivirus of domestic cats, has been used extensively as an animal model for the pathogenesis and therapy of human HIV-1 infection. Cats, however, are not amenable to large-scale efficacy trials because of their relatively large size, high cost, and limited degree of physiologic characterization, particularly with regard to drug metabolism. To adapt the feline immune system to a small laboratory animal host, severe combined immunodeficient mice (SCID mice) were engrafted with feline lymphoid tissues (forming the SCID-fe mouse) and inoculated with FIV. Two quantitative parameters, the incidence of provirus detection in feline tissue grafts and the level of feline IgG in plasma, were used to demonstrate the antiviral efficacy of 3'-azido-3'-deoxythymidine (AZT, azidothymidine, Retrovir, zidovudine) in the SCID-fe system. Of 17 SCID-fe mice inoculated with 7 x 10(6) peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from an FIV-infected cat, eight had detectable FIV provirus in both the feline thymus and feline lymph node implants, as measured by polymerase chain reaction (PCR)/Southern blot analysis. Treatment of these mice with AZT at a dose of 125 mg kg-1 day-1 in drinking water beginning 1 day prior to FIV inoculation and continuing throughout the study interval prevented the dual detection of provirus in feline lymph node and thymus grafts of all mice tested. In a separate experiment, the level of spontaneous feline IgG production was quantified by ELISA 2 weeks after FIV inoculation with and without AZT treatment. Mean plasma feline IgG level of five SCID-fe mice inoculated with 10(3) TCID50 cell-free FIV was 2.23 mg ml-1. Mean feline IgG level of five mice inoculated with the same quantity of FIV and treated with AZT beginning 1 day prior to virus inoculation and continuing for 2 weeks thereafter was 14.98 mg ml-1. AZT significantly (P < 0.05) enhanced feline humoral immune function at a virus inoculum titer of 10(3) TCID50.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
缺乏一种安全、经济的用于人类免疫缺陷病毒1型(HIV-1)感染人类的鼠类慢病毒模型,这阻碍了对潜在抗病毒化合物、疫苗和生物反应调节剂的临床前评估。需要一种不使用HIV-1的小动物模型,以将人类意外暴露的风险降至最低,提高对稀缺实验化合物的有效利用,并减少进行具有统计学意义的体内试验所需的实验室空间。猫免疫缺陷病毒(FIV)是家猫的一种免疫抑制性慢病毒,已被广泛用作人类HIV-1感染发病机制和治疗的动物模型。然而,由于猫相对较大的体型、高昂的成本以及生理特征的有限程度,特别是在药物代谢方面,猫不适合进行大规模疗效试验。为了使猫的免疫系统适应小型实验动物宿主,将严重联合免疫缺陷小鼠(SCID小鼠)移植猫淋巴组织(形成SCID-fe小鼠)并接种FIV。使用两个定量参数,即猫组织移植物中前病毒检测的发生率和血浆中猫IgG的水平,来证明3'-叠氮-3'-脱氧胸苷(AZT,叠氮胸苷,Retrovir,齐多夫定)在SCID-fe系统中的抗病毒疗效。在17只接种来自FIV感染猫的7×10⁶外周血单个核细胞(PBMC)的SCID-fe小鼠中,通过聚合酶链反应(PCR)/Southern印迹分析测量,有8只在猫胸腺和猫淋巴结植入物中均检测到可检测的FIV前病毒。在FIV接种前1天开始,以125mg kg⁻¹天⁻¹的剂量在饮用水中给这些小鼠用AZT治疗,并在整个研究期间持续给药,可防止在所有测试小鼠的猫淋巴结和胸腺移植物中双重检测到前病毒。在一项单独的实验中,在接种FIV有或没有AZT治疗2周后,通过ELISA对自发猫IgG产生水平进行定量。接种10³TCID₅₀无细胞FIV的5只SCID-fe小鼠的平均血浆猫IgG水平为2.23mg ml⁻¹。接种相同量FIV并在病毒接种前1天开始用AZT治疗并持续2周的5只小鼠的平均猫IgG水平为14.98mg ml⁻¹。在病毒接种滴度为10³TCID₅₀时,AZT显著(P<0.05)增强了猫的体液免疫功能。(摘要截断于400字)