| Literature DB >> 25125288 |
Justin M Greene, Andrea M Weiler, Matthew R Reynolds, Brian T Cain, Ngoc H Pham, Adam J Ericsen, Eric J Peterson, Kristin Crosno, Kevin Brunner, Thomas C Friedrich, David H O'Connor.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infection of nonhuman primates is the predominant model for preclinical evaluation of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) vaccines. These studies frequently utilize high-doses of SIV that ensure infection after a single challenge but do not recapitulate critical facets of sexual HIV transmission. Investigators are increasingly using low-dose challenges in which animals are challenged once every week or every two weeks in order to better replicate sexual HIV transmission. Using this protocol, some animals require over ten challenges before SIV infection is detectable, potentially inducing localized immunity. Moreover, the lack of certainty over which challenge will lead to productive infection prevents tissue sampling immediately surrounding the time of infection.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25125288 PMCID: PMC4149191 DOI: 10.1186/s12977-014-0066-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Retrovirology ISSN: 1742-4690 Impact factor: 4.602
Figure 1Plasma vRNA per ml of plasma in animals challenged with indicated dose of SIV.
Figure 2Rapid repeated low-dose challenge protocol. Animals were challenged three times a day for three consecutive days.
Figure 3Viral loads were measured in SIV-challenged animals. Plasma vRNA per ml of plasma. a) in two pilot animals challenged by RRLD and b) in ten animals that received cells from donor macaques and were then challenged using the RRLD protocol. These ten animals include both vaccinated animal cell recipients (VACR) and mock-vaccinated animal cell recipients (MVACR). c) Peak viral loads for animals challenged by RRLD protocol or standard single 50,000 TCID50 challenge. d) Viral loads from RRLD and standard single 50,000 TCID50 challenge at 16-18 weeks postinfection. The high-dose challenge viral loads have been published in a previous manuscript [10].