| Literature DB >> 22978787 |
Andrea Savarino1, Enrico Garaci.
Abstract
Our inability to cure HIV/AIDS is related to the ability of the virus to establish reservoirs during treatment. In order to develop new strategies, it is certainly essential that a suitable animal model be implemented. In the recent work of Shytaj et al., it has been possible to inhibit viral replication to levels below the assay detection limit in the macaque AIDS model. Moreover, different therapeutic regimens applied to the rhesus macaque AIDS model (herein reviewed), including ours, are starting to show the potential to induce, following therapy suspension, conditions reminiscent of a drug-free control of the infection.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22978787 PMCID: PMC3470962 DOI: 10.1186/1742-4690-9-75
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Retrovirology ISSN: 1742-4690 Impact factor: 4.602
Figure 1Schematic representation of the most likely viral reservoir dynamicsand the possible anti-reservoir drug strategies mentioned in the text. Briefly, latently infected cells proliferate by either homeostasis or antigen-driven activation. Part of the activated cells becomes productively infected, spreading the virus to uninfected cells, while another portion either dies or reverts to a latent state. These phenomena contribute to the expansion of the viral reservoir during lentiviral infections. If cell-to-cell viral spread is blocked by highly-intensified antiretroviral therapy (H-iART), activation-driven proliferation and homeostatic proliferation represent the main mechanisms for the expansion/persistence of the viral reservoir during therapy. One important component of H-iART, i.e. the CCR5 blocker maraviroc, was shown in a recent study (Ref. [8]) also to decrease activation-induced proliferation of the central and transitional memory T-cells (encompassing the viral reservoir). Antilatency drugs such as the histone deacetylase inhibitors may favor the transition of the activated latently infected cells to the productive class [vulnerable to viral cytopathogenicity, specific immune responses, or pro-oxidant drugs auch as buthionine sulfoximine (BSO)] at the expense of reversion of the same cells to the latent state. Finally, the gold salt auranofin, by decreasing the lifespan of the central and transitional memory T-cells, restricts their potential to expand by both homeostatic and activation-driven proliferation. Adapted and modified from Ref. [14].