1. A Combination Microbicide Gel Protects Macaques Against Vaginal Simian Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Reverse Transcriptase Infection, But Only Partially Reduces Herpes Simplex Virus-2 Infection After a Single High-Dose Cochallenge
- Author
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Meropi Aravantinou, James F. Blanchard, Thomas M. Zydowsky, Samantha Seidor, Radhika Menon, Mayla Hsu, Jessica Kenney, Melissa Robbiani, Jeffrey D. Lifson, José A. Fernández-Romero, Michael Piatak, Daniel Goldman, Nina Derby, and Agegnehu Gettie
- Subjects
Herpesvirus 2, Human ,viruses ,Immunology ,Simian Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome ,medicine.disease_cause ,Chemoprevention ,Microbiology ,Anti-Infective Agents ,Virology ,Microbicide ,medicine ,Animals ,Herpes Genitalis ,Vaccines ,Reverse-transcriptase inhibitor ,biology ,virus diseases ,Simian immunodeficiency virus ,Macaca mulatta ,HIV Reverse Transcriptase ,Reverse transcriptase ,Microbicides for sexually transmitted diseases ,Infectious Diseases ,Herpes simplex virus ,Vaginal Creams, Foams, and Jellies ,biology.protein ,Female ,Simian Immunodeficiency Virus ,Antibody ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Herpes simplex virus-2 (HSV-2) infection increases HIV susceptibility. We previously established a rhesus macaque model of vaginal HSV-2 preexposure followed by cochallenge with HSV-2 and simian/human immunodeficiency virus-reverse transcriptase (SHIV-RT). Using this model, we showed that a gel containing the nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI) MIV-150 in carrageenan (CG) reduced SHIV-RT infection. To evaluate the efficacy of new generation microbicides against both viruses, we first established dual infection after single vaginal cochallenge with SHIV-RT and HSV-2 in HSV-2-naive macaques. All animals (6/6) became HSV-2 infected, with 4/6 coinfected with SHIV-RT. In a control group cochallenged with SHIV-RT and UV-inactivated HSV-2, 2/4 became SHIV-RT infected, and none had detectable HSV-2. Low-level HSV-2-specific antibody and T cell responses were detected in some HSV-2-infected animals. To test a CG gel containing MIV-150 and zinc acetate (MZC), which provided naive animals full protection from SHIV-RT for at least 8 h, MZC (vs. CG) was applied daily for 14 days followed by cochallenge 8 h later. MZC prevented SHIV-RT infection (0/9 infected, p=0.04 vs. 3/6 in CG controls), but only reduced HSV-2 infection by 20% (6/9 infected vs. 5/6 in CG, p=0.6). In HSV-2-infected animals, none of the gel-treated animals seroconverted, and only the CG controls had measurable HSV-2-specific T cell responses. This study shows the promise of MZC to prevent immunodeficiency virus infection (even in the presence of HSV-2) and reduce HSV-2 infection after exposure to a high-dose inoculum. Additionally, it demonstrates the potential of a macaque coinfection model to evaluate broad-spectrum microbicides.
- Published
- 2014
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