A SIV molecular clone that targets the CNS and induces neuroAIDS in rhesus macaques

K Matsuda, NE Riddick, CA Lee, SB Puryear… - PLoS …, 2017 - journals.plos.org
K Matsuda, NE Riddick, CA Lee, SB Puryear, F Wu, BAP Lafont, S Whitted, VM Hirsch
PLoS pathogens, 2017journals.plos.org
Despite effective control of plasma viremia with the use of combination antiretroviral
therapies (cART), minor cognitive and motor disorders (MCMD) persist as a significant
clinical problem in HIV-infected patients. Non-human primate models are therefore required
to study mechanisms of disease progression in the central nervous system (CNS). We
isolated a strain of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV), SIVsm804E, which induces
neuroAIDS in a high proportion of rhesus macaques and identified enhanced antagonism of …
Despite effective control of plasma viremia with the use of combination antiretroviral therapies (cART), minor cognitive and motor disorders (MCMD) persist as a significant clinical problem in HIV-infected patients. Non-human primate models are therefore required to study mechanisms of disease progression in the central nervous system (CNS). We isolated a strain of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV), SIVsm804E, which induces neuroAIDS in a high proportion of rhesus macaques and identified enhanced antagonism of the host innate factor BST-2 as an important factor in the macrophage tropism and initial neuro-invasion of this isolate. In the present study, we further developed this model by deriving a molecular clone SIVsm804E-CL757 (CL757). This clone induced neurological disorders in high frequencies but without rapid disease progression and thus is more reflective of the tempo of neuroAIDS in HIV-infection. NeuroAIDS was also induced in macaques co-inoculated with CL757 and the parental AIDS-inducing, but non-neurovirulent SIVsmE543-3 (E543-3). Molecular analysis of macaques infected with CL757 revealed compartmentalization of virus populations between the CNS and the periphery. CL757 exclusively targeted the CNS whereas E543-3 was restricted to the periphery consistent with a role for viral determinants in the mechanisms of neuroinvasion. CL757 would be a useful model to investigate disease progression in the CNS and as a model to study virus reservoirs in the CNS.
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