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Relative Transmissibility of an R5 Clade C Simian‐Human Immunodeficiency Virus Across Different Mucosae in Macaques Parallels the Relative Risks of Sexual HIV‐1 Transmission in Humans via Different Routes

Authors :
James G. Else
Mark C. Poznansky
Daniel C. Anderson
Victor G. Kramer
Nagadenahalli B. Siddappa
Gaia Sciaranghella
Chris Souder
Shawn P. O'Neil
Rama Rao Amara
Elizabeth Strobert
Michael Santosuosso
W. Evan Secor
Francois Villinger
Ruth M. Ruprecht
Sandra J. Lee
Agnès Laurence Chenine
Francis J. Novembre
Vijayakumar Velu
Robert A. Rasmussen
Source :
The Journal of Infectious Diseases. 201:1155-1163
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2010.

Abstract

Worldwide, approximately 90% of all human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmissions occur mucosally; almost all involve R5 strains. Risks of sexual HIV acquisition are highest for rectal, then vaginal, and finally oral exposures.Mucosal lacerations may affect the rank order of susceptibility to HIV but cannot be assessed in humans. We measured relative virus transmissibility across intact mucosae in macaques using a single stock of SHIV-1157ipd3N4, a simian-human immunodeficiency virus encoding a primary R5 HIV clade C env (SHIV-C).The penetrability of rhesus macaque mucosae differed significantly, with rectal challenge requiring the least virus, followed by vaginal and then oral routes (P = .031, oral vs vaginal; P.001 rectal vs vaginal). These findings imply that intrinsic mucosal properties are responsible for the differential mucosal permeability. The latter paralleled the rank order reported for humans, with relative risk estimates within the range of epidemiological human studies. To test whether inflammation facilitates virus transmission--as predicted from human studies--we established a macaque model of localized buccal inflammation. Systemic infection occurred across inflamed but not normal buccal mucosa.Our primate data recapitulate virus transmission risks observed in humans, thus establishing R5 SHIV-1157ipd3N4 in macaques as a robust model system to study cofactors involved in human mucosal HIV transmission and its prevention.

Details

ISSN :
15376613 and 00221899
Volume :
201
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Infectious Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3b68f43433a7ea17f941ad356eabaca1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1086/651274