AIDS research and human retroviruses
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AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses · Jul 2015
Observational StudyFull Viral Suppression, Low-Level Viremia, and Quantifiable Plasma HIV-RNA at the End of Pregnancy in HIV-Infected Women on Antiretroviral Treatment.
There is limited information on full viral suppression and low-level HIV-RNA viremia in HIV-infected women at the end of pregnancy. We investigated HIV-RNA levels close to delivery in women on antiretroviral treatment in order to define rates of complete suppression, low-level viremia, and quantifiable HIV-RNA, exploring as potential determinants some clinical and viroimmunological variables. Plasma samples from a national study in Italy, collected between 2003 and 2012, were used. ⋯ In conclusion, HIV-infected pregnant women showed a high rate of viral suppression and a low resistance rate before delivery. In most cases no target HIV-RNA was detected in plasma, suggesting a low risk of subsequent virological rebound and development of resistance. Women with high levels of HIV-RNA in early pregnancy and those who have concomitant HCV infection should be considered at higher risk of having quantifiable HIV-RNA at the end of pregnancy.
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AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses · Feb 2014
HIV type 1 infection of plasmacytoid and myeloid dendritic cells is restricted by high levels of SAMHD1 and cannot be counteracted by Vpx.
Dendritic cells are professional antigen-presenting cells of the immune system and are major producers of type-I interferon. Their role in HIV-1 infection is not well understood. They express CD4 and CCR5 yet appear to be resistant to infection. ⋯ The resistance to infection was not counteracted by Vpx and SAMHD1 was not degraded in these cells. Treatment of pDCs with a cocktail of antibodies that blocked type-I interferon signaling partially restored the ability of Vpx to induce SAMHD1 degradation and caused the cells to become partially permissive to infection. pDCs and mDCs responded to HIV-1 virions by inducing an innate immune response but did not appear to sense newly produced Gag protein. The findings suggest that in vivo, dendritic cells serve as sentinels to alert the immune system to the virus but do not themselves become infected by virtue of high levels of SAMHD1.
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AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses · Sep 2013
Multicenter StudySafety and immunovirologic outcomes with maraviroc combination regimens in patients with a history of past treatment failures and virologic resistance in Brazil: an open-label, multicenter phase 3b study.
Maraviroc is a first-in-class chemokine coreceptor type-5 (CCR5) antagonist with demonstrated immunovirologic activity in treatment-experienced (TE) patients with CCR5 (R5)-tropic HIV-1; however, experience in regimens containing newer antiretroviral agents is limited. The primary objective of this 96-week open-label, noncomparative, multicenter Phase 3b study (NCT00478231) was to assess the safety of maraviroc in combination with optimized background therapy (OBT), which could include recently introduced agents such as darunavir and raltegravir in TE patients in Brazil with R5 HIV-1 and limited therapeutic options. Immunovirologic activity was a secondary endpoint. ⋯ Median CD4(+) cell count increased throughout the study; the mean change from baseline to end of treatment was 174.1 cells/μl. In conclusion, maraviroc, combined with different agents from multiple classes, was well tolerated in highly TE patients. Maraviroc plus OBT was associated with an immunovirologic response in this population.
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AIDS Res. Hum. Retroviruses · Dec 2012
CD4 T cell depletion exacerbates acute Mycobacterium tuberculosis while reactivation of latent infection is dependent on severity of tissue depletion in cynomolgus macaques.
CD4 T cells are believed to be important in protection against Mycobacterium tuberculosis, but the relative contribution to control of initial or latent infection is not known. Antibody-mediated depletion of CD4 T cells in M. tuberculosis-infected cynomolgus macaques was used to study the role of CD4 T cells during acute and latent infection. Anti-CD4 antibody severely reduced levels of CD4 T cells in blood, airways, and lymph nodes. ⋯ CD4 T cells are required for protection against acute infection but reactivation from latent infection is dependent on the severity of depletion in the draining lymph nodes. CD4 depletion influences CD8 T cell function. This study has important implications for human HIV-M. tuberculosis coinfection.