| Literature DB >> 32425949 |
Allan Bowen1, Elizabeth E Sweeney1, Rohan Fernandes1,2.
Abstract
Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) serves as an effective strategy to combat HIV infections by suppressing viral replication in patients with HIV/AIDS. However, HAART does not provide HIV/AIDS patients with a sterilizing or functional cure, and introduces several deleterious comorbidities. Moreover, the virus is able to persist within latent reservoirs, both undetected by the immune system and unaffected by HAART, increasing the risk of a viral rebound. The field of immunoengineering, which utilizes varied bioengineering approaches to interact with the immune system and potentiate its therapeutic effects against HIV, is being increasingly investigated in HIV cure research. In particular, nanoparticle-based immunoengineered approaches are especially attractive because they offer advantages including the improved delivery and functionality of classical HIV drugs such as antiretrovirals and experimental drugs such as latency-reversing agents (LRAs), among others. Here, we present and discuss the current state of the field in nanoparticle-based immunoengineering approaches for an HIV cure. Specifically, we discuss nanoparticle-based methods for improving HAART as well as latency reversal, developing vaccines, targeting viral fusion, enhancing gene editing approaches, improving adoptively transferred immune-cell mediated reservoir clearance, and other therapeutic and prevention approaches. Although nanoparticle-based immunoengineered approaches are currently at the stage of preclinical testing, the promising findings obtained in these studies demonstrate the potential of this emerging field for developing an HIV cure.Entities:
Keywords: HAART (highly active antiretroviral therapy); HIV cure strategies; combination therapy for HIV; immune activation; immunoengineering; latency reversing agents; nanoparticles
Mesh:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32425949 PMCID: PMC7212361 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.00789
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Overview of the applications of nanoparticle-based immunoengineering approaches for combating HIV-1.
Nanoparticle-based immunoengineering approaches for HIV/AIDS.
| Poloxamer-based nanoparticles | LASER ART (also known as nanoART) nanoparticles for controlled release of HAART agents | ( |
| Lipid nanoparticle | Lipid-drug nanoparticles exhibited 5-fold increased bioavailability of HAART drugs in lymph nodes, and markedly increased sustained release over the course of 7 days | ( |
| PLGA/pluronic nanoparticle | Nanoformulation of HAART drugs demonstrate greater bioavailability in plasma and absorption in various tissues over the course of 14 days | ( |
| Lactoferrin nanoparticle | First-line nanoformulated HAART drugs exhibited 4-fold increase in bioavailability and an increase in anti-HIV activity compared to soluble agents | ( |
| Lipid nanoparticle | LRA and protease inhibitor encapsulated within nanoparticle reversed latency and prevented HIV-1 viral spread | ( |
| Lipid-coated PLGA nanoparticle | Co-administration of LRAs-individually encapsulated within nanoparticles exhibited synergistic induction of HIV-1 mRNA levels at low cytotoxicity | ( |
| Iron oxide nanoparticle | LRA and vorinostat-loaded nanoparticle penetrated BBB, reversed HIV-1 latency and exhibited antiviral efficacy in astrocytes. | ( |
| PLG/PEG nanoparticle | LRA and protease inhibitor encapsulated within PLGA-PEG nanoparticles reversed latency and inhibited viral spread | ( |
| PLGA nanoparticle | Encapsulating TLR-agonist improved HIV-1 vaccine immunogenicity and decrease required dose for immunogenic effect | ( |
| Lumazine synthase- and ferritin-based nanoparticles | Antigens encapsulated within nanoparticles were trafficked within germinal centers promoting a potent immunogenic response | ( |
| Polyethylenimine mannose/DNA/glucose nanoparticle | DermaVir nanoformulation delivered HIV-1 antigen to Langerhans cells, which matured into Dendritic cells, mounting an immune response | ( |
| eOD-GT8 nanoparticle | Engineered outer domain (eOD)-60 mer nanoparticle exhibited sufficient precursor naïve B cell binding for bnAb production | ( |
| Liposome nanoparticle | Clade C-derived trimers decorated on liposomal surface induced enhanced germinal center and bnAb responses compared to soluble trimers | ( |
| Ferritin nanoparticle | Consensus-derived Env trimers conjugated to nanoparticles induced greater bnAb targeting of apex trimers of | ( |
| Protein nanoparticle | Nanomaterial presenting SOSIP trimer increased B-cell activation and induced greater bnAb titers against Tier-1A viral strains | ( |
| Liposome nanoparticle | Vaccination with liposomes formulated with HIV envelope protein elicits bnAb targeting and neutralization | ( |
| Ferritin nanoparticle | HIV antigens are presented on nanoparticles in native trimeric structure as a tool for vaccine development | ( |
| Silver nanoparticle | Silver nanoparticles exert anti-HIV activity through gp120 binding in various viral strains | ( |
| Poly (acrylate)-based nanoparticle | Hydrophobic nanoparticle impedes amyloid fiber structure, thereby disrupting HIV-1 trafficking to its target cell | ( |
| PLGA nanoparticle | Nanoparticles coated with a T-cell membrane were able to serve as a “decoy” for HIV-1 binding, resulting in viral suppression | ( |
| Extracellular vesicles | Extracellular vesicles (EVs) released by | ( |
| Extracellular vesicles | EVs isolated from semen inhibited HIV-1 regardless of donor infection status; EVs from ART-treated subjects inhibited HIV-1 | ( |
| Gold nanoparticles | Au-nanoparticles can mediate CRISPR-Cas9 components to target cells with higher efficiency and lower cytotoxicity | ( |
| Poloxamer-based nanoparticles | LASER ART combined with CRISPR/Cas9 eliminated HIV-1 in a small subset of mice | ( |
| PLGA nanoparticles | Nanoparticles encapsulating neutralizing antibody and LRA improved NK cell effector function toward J-Lat cells compared to free agents | ( |
| Lipid nanoparticle | IL-15-loaded nanocapsules conjugated to HIV-1-specific CTLs improved elimination of infected cells | ( |
| PEG- | STING agonist nanoformulation reversed HIV-1 immune evasion mechanism | ( |
| Quantum dots | Graphene quantum dots mediated HIV-1 viral suppression | ( |
| Nanodiamonds | Efavirenz-nanodiamond conjugation improved bioavailability and blood brain barrier penetration | ( |
| Gold nanoparticles | Gold conjugated with HIV integrase inhibitors could penetrate the BBB and exert antiviral efficacy in targeted HIV-1-infected microglial cells | ( |
| PLGA nanoparticles | FTC-loaded nanoparticles exhibited greater bioavailability and lower IC50 compared to soluble agents | ( |
| PLGA nanoparticles | TDF-loaded nanoparticles in thermosensitive gel conferred 100% protection from HIV-1 strains within 24 h time period and had no detectable viral levels in plasma throughout 4 weeks period | ( |
| Cellulose acetate phthalate nanoparticles | DTG-loaded nanoparticles in thermosensitive gel were uptaken into vaginal epithelial cells with low cytotoxicity | ( |