4.6 Article

Prophylactic and therapeutic benefits of short-term 9-[2-(R)-(phosphonomethoxy)propyl]adenine (PMPA) administration to newborn macaques following oral inoculation with simian immunodeficiency virus with reduced susceptibility to PMPA

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 74, Issue 4, Pages 1767-1774

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.74.4.1767-1774.2000

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Funding

  1. NCRR NIH HHS [RR00169, P51 RR000169] Funding Source: Medline

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Simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infection of newborn macaques is a useful animal model of human pediatric AIDS to study pathogenesis and to develop intervention strategies aimed at preventing infection or delaying disease progression. In previous studies, we demonstrated that 9-[2-(R)-(phosphonomethoxy)propyl] adenine (PMPA; tenofovir) was highly effective in protecting newborn macaques against infection with virulent wild-type (i.e., drug-susceptible) SIVmac251. In the present study, we determined how reduced drug susceptibility of the virus inoculum affects the chemoprophylactic success. SIVmac055 is a virulent isolate that has a fivefold-reduced in vitro susceptibility to PMPA, associated with a K65R mutation and additional amino acid changes (N69T, R82K, A158S, S211N) in reverse transcriptase (RT). Eight newborn macaques were inoculated orally with SIVmac055. The three untreated control animals became SIVmac055 infected; these animals had persistently high viremia and developed fatal immunodeficiency within 3 months. Five animals were treated once daily with PMPA (at 30 mg/kg of body weight) for 4 weeks, starting 24 h prior to oral SIVmac055 inoculation. Two of the five PMPA-treated animals had no evidence of infection. The other three PMPA-treated infant macaques became infected but had a delayed viremia, enhanced antiviral antibody responses, and a slower disease course (AIDS in 5 to 15 months). No reversion to wild-type susceptibility or loss of the K65R mutation was detected in virus isolates from any of the PMPA-treated or untreated SIVmac055-infected animals. Several additional amino acid changes developed in RT, but they were not exclusively associated with PMPA therapy. The results of this study suggest that prophylactic administration of PMPA to human newborns and to adults following exposure to human immunodeficiency virus will still be beneficial even in the presence of viral variants with reduced susceptibility to PMPA.

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