Kraiselburd E N, Salaman A, Beltrán M, Rivera M, Oliver J, Kessler M, Knezevich M, Rodriguez A, Bilska M, Montefiori D, Torres-Bauza L J, Martinez I
Department of Microbiology and Medical Zoology, School of Medicine, University of Puerto Rico, San Juan 00936, USA.
Cell Mol Biol (Noisy-le-grand). 1997 Nov;43(7):915-24.
Non-infectious virus-like particles of SIVsmB7 that expresses env and gag gene products but are defective in pol and vpx/vpr were assessed for their ability to induce protective immunity against infection with pathogenic SIVsmE660 in rhesus macaques. Animals were immunized in three groups: group A was primed with cell-associated SIVsmB7 and boosted with cell-free SIVsmB7; group B was primed with cell-free SIVsmB7 and boosted with cell-free SIVsmB7 conjugated to iron oxide microbeads; group C was primed with cell-free SIVsmB7 mixed with Titer Max adjuvant and boosted with cell-free SIVsmB7 mixed with SAF-M adjuvant followed by secondary boosting with cell-free SIVsmB7 conjugated to microbeads. Animals were challenged intravenously with 20 animal infectious doses of SIVsmE660 grown in rhesus peripheral blood mononuclear cells 3 weeks after final boosting. All animals became infected as evidenced by quantitative virus cultivation. Sera from immunized animals contained low-titer antibodies by ELISA and low or undetectable neutralizing antibodies on the day of challenge but strong anamnestic antibody responses were observed following challenge. Interestingly, 2 of 3 animals in group A showed evidence of transient viremia and more stable CD4 counts following challenge as compared to the other immunized animals and to non-immunized controls. Thus, immunization with cell-associated SIVsmB7 did not provide sterilizing immunity against challenge with a highly pathogenic SIV strain but might have caused virus clearance later in infection.