Literature DB >> 8811353

Passive immune globulin therapy in the SIV/macaque model: early intervention can alter disease profile.

N L Haigwood1, A Watson, W F Sutton, J McClure, A Lewis, J Ranchalis, B Travis, G Voss, N L Letvin, S L Hu, V M Hirsch, P R Johnson.   

Abstract

One of the major questions in AIDS is the role that the host immune system and the virus play in the dynamics of infection and the development of AIDS in an infected individual. In order to test the role of antibody in controlling viral infection, high-dose SIV-immune globulin was passively transferred to infected macaques early in infection. Immune globulin purified from the plasma of an SIV-infected long-term non-progressor macaque (SIVIG) or a pool of normal immune globulin (normal Ig) was infused into SIVsmE660-infected macaques (170 mg/kg) at one and fourteen days post infection. Animals were monitored for SIV-specific antibodies, viremia, plasma antigenemia, and clinical course. All animals were infected by SIV. At 16 months post infection, five macaques in the combined control groups have been euthanized, one as a rapid progressor with debilitating disease at 20 weeks post infection. Four macaques from the comparison groups have signs of AIDS, accompanied by high and increasing levels of virus and p27 antigenemia. One of the ten control animals had a very low virus load in plasma and peripheral blood and lymph node mononuclear cells at all times tested and has remained disease-free. In the SIVIG treatment group, two macaques were euthanized at 18-20 weeks due to AIDS, rapid progressors to disease. Three macaques in the SIVIG group had an initial high level of virus in plasma, peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), and lymph node mononuclear cells (LNMC), which dropped to baseline at 6 weeks post infection and has remained very low or negative for 16 months, a disease profile which has not been observed in untreated animals in this model to date. These macaques have remained clinically healthy. The sixth treated animal is also healthy, with very low virus burden that is detectable only by nested set polymerase chain reaction (PCR). All SIVIG-treated macaques had no detectable p27 plasma antigenemia for the first 10 weeks of infection, demonstrating that the IgG effectively complexed with the virus. The immunological correlates in the treated animals include development of de novo virus-specific antibodies and/or cytotoxic T cell (CTL), both of which are hallmarks of long term non-progressors. The two SIVIG-treated macaques that progress to disease rapidly had no detectable de novo humoral immune responses, as is often seen in rapid HIV disease in humans. Envelope-specific and virus neutralizing antibodies alone were not sufficient to prevent disease progression, as the plasma of both non-progressors as well as progressors had high titers of envelope-specific and neutralizing antibodies against SIVsmE660. Poor clinical prognosis was associated with moderate to high and increasing virus loads in plasma, PBMC, and lymph nodes. Good clinical prognosis correlated with low or undetectable post acute viremia in the peripheral blood and lymph nodes. We hypothesize that SIVIG reduced the spread of virus by eliminating or reducing plasma virus through immune complexes during the first four to 8 weeks of infection and then maintaining this low level of viremia until the host immune response was capable of virus control. Reduction of virus burden early in infection by passive IgG can alter disease outcome in SIV infection of macaques. Modifications of this strategy may lead to effective early treatment of HIV-1 infection in humans.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8811353     DOI: 10.1016/0165-2478(96)02563-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Immunol Lett        ISSN: 0165-2478            Impact factor:   3.685


  51 in total

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5.  Dynamic evolution of antibody populations in a rhesus macaque infected with attenuated simian immunodeficiency virus identified by surface plasmon resonance.

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6.  Protective effects of broadly neutralizing immunoglobulin against homologous and heterologous equine infectious anemia virus infection in horses with severe combined immunodeficiency.

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Review 7.  A vaccine for HIV type 1: the antibody perspective.

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8.  Polyfunctional CD4+ T-cell induction in neutralizing antibody-triggered control of simian immunodeficiency virus infection.

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