pubmed:abstractText |
A highly pathogenic simian/human immunodeficiency virus (SHIV), SHIV(DH12R), isolated from a rhesus macaque that had been treated with anti-human CD8 monoclonal antibody at the time of primary infection with the nonpathogenic, molecularly cloned SHIV(DH12), induced marked and rapid CD4(+) T cell loss in all rhesus macaques intravenously inoculated with 1.0 50% tissue culture infective dose (TCID(50)) to 4.1 x 10(5) TCID(50)s of virus. Animals inoculated with 650 TCID(50)s of SHIV(DH12R) or more experienced irreversible CD4(+) T lymphocyte depletion and developed clinical disease requiring euthanasia between weeks 12 and 23 postinfection. In contrast, the CD4(+) T-cell numbers in four of five monkeys receiving 25 TCID(50)s of SHIV(DH12R) or less stabilized at low levels, and these surviving animals produced antibodies capable of neutralizing SHIV(DH12R). In the fifth monkey, no recovery from the CD4(+) T cell decline occurred, and the animal had to be euthanized. Viral RNA levels, subsequent to the initial peak of infection but not at peak viremia, correlated with the virus inoculum size and the eventual clinical course. Both initial infection rate constants, k, and decay constants, d, were determined, but only the latter were statistically correlated to clinical outcome. The attenuating effects of reduced inoculum size were also observed when virus was inoculated by the mucosal route. Because the uncloned SHIV(DH12R) stock possessed the genetic properties of a lentivirus quasispecies, we were able to assess the evolution of the input virus swarm in animals surviving the acute infection by monitoring the emergence of neutralization escape viral variants.
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pubmed:affiliation |
Laboratory of Molecular Microbiology, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-0460, USA.
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