Simian immunodeficiency virus SIVagm dynamics in African green monkeys

I Pandrea, RM Ribeiro, R Gautam, T Gaufin… - Journal of …, 2008 - Am Soc Microbiol
I Pandrea, RM Ribeiro, R Gautam, T Gaufin, M Pattison, M Barnes, C Monjure, C Stoulig…
Journal of virology, 2008Am Soc Microbiol
The mechanisms underlying the lack of disease progression in natural simian
immunodeficiency virus (SIV) hosts are still poorly understood. To test the hypothesis that
SIV-infected African green monkeys (AGMs) avoid AIDS due to virus replication occurring in
long-lived infected cells, we infected six animals with SIVagm and treated them with potent
antiretroviral therapy [ART; 9-R-(2-phosphonomethoxypropyl) adenine (tenofovir) and beta-
2, 3-dideoxy-3-thia-5-fluorocytidine (emtricitabine)]. All AGMs showed a rapid decay of …
Abstract
The mechanisms underlying the lack of disease progression in natural simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) hosts are still poorly understood. To test the hypothesis that SIV-infected African green monkeys (AGMs) avoid AIDS due to virus replication occurring in long-lived infected cells, we infected six animals with SIVagm and treated them with potent antiretroviral therapy [ART; 9-R-(2-phosphonomethoxypropyl) adenine (tenofovir) and beta-2,3-dideoxy-3-thia-5-fluorocytidine (emtricitabine)]. All AGMs showed a rapid decay of plasma viremia that became undetectable 36 h after ART initiation. A significant decrease of viral load was observed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells and intestine. Mathematical modeling of viremia decay post-ART indicates a half-life of productively infected cells ranging from 4 to 9.5 h, i.e., faster than previously reported for human immunodeficiency virus and SIV. ART induced a slight but significant increase in peripheral CD4+ T-cell counts but no significant changes in CD4+ T-cell levels in lymph nodes and intestine. Similarly, ART did not significantly change the levels of cell proliferation, activation, and apoptosis, already low in AGMs chronically infected with SIVagm. Collectively, these results indicate that, in SIVagm-infected AGMs, the bulk of virus replication is sustained by short-lived cells; therefore, differences in disease outcome between SIVmac infection of macaques and SIVagm infection of AGMs are unlikely due to intrinsic differences in the in vivo cytopathicities between the two viruses.
American Society for Microbiology