Literature DB >> 14499289

Antiviral and immunological benefits in HIV patients receiving intranasal peptide T (DAPTA).

Maria T Polianova1, Francis W Ruscetti, Candace B Pert, Rochelle E Tractenberg, Gifford Leoung, Scott Strang, Michael R Ruff.   

Abstract

D-Ala-Peptide T-amide (DAPTA), the first viral entry inhibitor, blocks chemokine (CCR5) receptors, not CD4. Early investigators could not "replicate" DAPTAs potent in vitro antiviral effect using the lab-adapted, X4, peptide T-insensitive strain, IIIB, delaying clinical virological studies. We now report that DAPTA, administered to eleven long-term infected (mean=17 years) patients with stable persistent plasma "virus" for up to 32 weeks did not change this level. Infectious virus could not be isolated from their plasma suggesting HIV RNA was devoid of replicative capacity. Progressively less actual virus (P<0.01) could be isolated from white blood cells (PBMCs). DAPTA flushed the monocyte reservoir to undetectable viral levels in most patients. Five of eleven had a mean CD4 increase of 33%. Immune benefits also included a four-fold increase in gamma-interferon-secreting T-cells (antiviral cytotoxic T-cells) in the absence of drug-related toxicity. All five CD4 responders had increases in antiviral T cells and decreases in infected monocytes, an argument for initiating further studies promptly.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14499289     DOI: 10.1016/s0196-9781(03)00176-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Peptides        ISSN: 0196-9781            Impact factor:   3.750


  5 in total

Review 1.  HIV, antiretroviral therapies, and the brain.

Authors:  Kevin J Liner; Michelle J Ro; Kevin R Robertson
Journal:  Curr HIV/AIDS Rep       Date:  2010-05       Impact factor: 5.071

Review 2.  Strategies for intranasal delivery of therapeutics for the prevention and treatment of neuroAIDS.

Authors:  Leah R Hanson; William H Frey
Journal:  J Neuroimmune Pharmacol       Date:  2006-09-15       Impact factor: 4.147

3.  Polycyclic peptide and glycopeptide antibiotics and their derivatives as inhibitors of HIV entry.

Authors:  Maria N Preobrazhenskaya; Eugenia N Olsufyeva
Journal:  Antiviral Res       Date:  2006-05-06       Impact factor: 5.970

4.  Novel small synthetic HIV-1 V3 crown variants: CCR5 targeting ligands.

Authors:  Anju Krishnan Anitha; Pratibha Narayanan; Neethu Ajayakumar; Krishnankutty Chandrika Sivakumar; Kesavakurup Santhosh Kumar
Journal:  J Biochem       Date:  2022-09-05       Impact factor: 3.241

Review 5.  The transport of anti-HIV drugs across blood-CNS interfaces: summary of current knowledge and recommendations for further research.

Authors:  Lavanya Varatharajan; Sarah A Thomas
Journal:  Antiviral Res       Date:  2009-01-25       Impact factor: 5.970

  5 in total

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