43 research outputs found

    In Vivo Anti-HIV Activity of the Heparin-Activated Serine Protease Inhibitor Antithrombin III Encapsulated in Lymph-Targeting Immunoliposomes

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    Endogenous serine protease inhibitors (serpins) are anti-inflammatory mediators with multiple biologic functions. Several serpins have been reported to modulate HIV pathogenesis, or exhibit potent anti-HIV activity in vitro, but the efficacy of serpins as therapeutic agents for HIV in vivo has not yet been demonstrated. In the present study, we show that heparin-activated antithrombin III (hep-ATIII), a member of the serpin family, significantly inhibits lentiviral replication in a non-human primate model. We further demonstrate greater than one log10 reduction in plasma viremia in the nonhuman primate system by loading of hep-ATIII into anti-HLA-DR immunoliposomes, which target tissue reservoirs of viral replication. We also demonstrate the utility of hep-ATIIII as a potential salvage agent for HIV strains resistant to standard anti-retroviral treatment. Finally, we applied gene-expression arrays to analyze hep-ATIII-induced host cell interactomes and found that downstream of hep-ATIII, two independent gene networks were modulated by host factors prostaglandin synthetase-2, ERK1/2 and NFΞΊB. Ultimately, understanding how serpins, such as hep-ATIII, regulate host responses during HIV infection may reveal new avenues for therapeutic intervention

    A Signature in HIV-1 Envelope Leader Peptide Associated with Transition from Acute to Chronic Infection Impacts Envelope Processing and Infectivity

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    Mucosal transmission of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) results in a bottleneck in viral genetic diversity. Gnanakaran and colleagues used a computational strategy to identify signature amino acids at particular positions in Envelope that were associated either with transmitted sequences sampled very early in infection, or sequences sampled during chronic infection. Among the strongest signatures observed was an enrichment for the stable presence of histidine at position 12 at transmission and in early infection, and a recurrent loss of histidine at position 12 in chronic infection. This amino acid lies within the leader peptide of Envelope, a region of the protein that has been shown to influence envelope glycoprotein expression and virion infectivity. We show a strong association between a positively charged amino acid like histidine at position 12 in transmitted/founder viruses with more efficient trafficking of the nascent envelope polypeptide to the endoplasmic reticulum and higher steady-state glycoprotein expression compared to viruses that have a non-basic position 12 residue, a substitution that was enriched among viruses sampled from chronically infected individuals. When expressed in the context of other viral proteins, transmitted envelopes with a basic amino acid position 12 were incorporated at higher density into the virus and exhibited higher infectious titers than did non-signature envelopes. These results support the potential utility of using a computational approach to examine large viral sequence data sets for functional signatures and indicate the importance of Envelope expression levels for efficient HIV transmission

    lentiglobin gene therapy for transfusion dependent Ξ² thalassemia outcomes from the phase 1 2 northstar and phase 3 northstar 2 studies

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    Introduction Transfusion-dependent Ξ²-thalassemia (TDT) is a severe genetic disease characterized by anemia, iron overload and serious comorbidities for which gene therapy may be an effective treatment option. LentiGlobin gene therapy contains autologous CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) transduced ex vivo with the BB305 lentiviral vector (LVV) encoding Ξ²-globin with a T87Q substitution. Objective Evaluate the efficacy and safety of LentiGlobin in patients with TDT in the phase 1/2 Northstar (HGB-204; NCT01745120) and phase 3 Northstar-2 (HGB-207; NCT02906202) studies. Methods Patients with TDT (β‰₯100 mL/kg/yr of red blood cells [RBCs] or β‰₯8 RBC transfusions/yr) received G-CSF and plerixafor for mobilization and HSCs were transduced with the BB305 LVV. Patients underwent single agent busulfan myeloablative conditioning, were infused with transduced cells, and were followed for engraftment, safety, and efficacy. Statistics are presented as median (min – max). Results As of March 7, 2018, 18 patients (12 – 35 yrs) were treated in Northstar (follow-up 32.1 [23.1 – 41.9] months) and as of May 15, 2018, 11 patients (12 – 24 yrs) were treated in Northstar-2 (follow-up 8.5 [0.3 – 16.2] months). Patients received a median cell dose of 8.0 (5.0 – 19.4) CD34+ cells Γ— 106/kg in both studies. The median time to neutrophil and platelet engraftment in both studies was 19 (14 – 30) days and 44 (19 – 191) days, respectively; 1 patient in Northstar-2 (0.3 months follow-up) had not engrafted at time of analysis. Of 6 patients with platelet engraftment β‰₯ Day 60, 4 had non-serious bleeding events prior to engraftment. All 6 had intact spleens and 3/6 received G-CSF between Days 0 – 21. Both factors appeared associated with time to platelet engraftment. In Northstar, 8/10 patients with non-Ξ²0/Ξ²0 genotypes and 2/8 patients with Ξ²0/Ξ²0 genotypes achieved transfusion independence (TI; weighted average hemoglobin [Hb] β‰₯ 9 g/dL without RBC transfusions for β‰₯ 12 months). Median Hb during TI was 10.0 (9.3 – 13.1) g/dL. In Northstar-2, 7/8 patients with non-Ξ²0/Ξ²0 genotypes and β‰₯ 6 months follow-up stopped RBC transfusions with Hb of 11.1 – 13.3 g/dL at last visit; the first patient treated achieved TI. Non-hematologic grade β‰₯ 3 adverse events post-infusion in β‰₯ 5/29 (15%) patients were stomatitis, febrile neutropenia, and pharyngeal inflammation. Veno-occlusive liver disease attributed to busulfan occurred in 4/29 patients (Table 1). There was no transplant-related mortality, vector-mediated replication competent lentivirus, or clonal dominance. Conclusion In Northstar, 80% of patients with non-Ξ²0/Ξ²0 genotypes achieved TI and early Northstar-2 data suggest that patients can achieve near-normal Hb without transfusions. The safety profile of LentiGlobin is consistent with myeloablative busulfan conditioning. Longer time to platelet engraftment was observed in few patients, but no graft failure or deaths were reported

    Serpin Induced Antiviral Activity of Prostaglandin Synthetase-2 against HIV-1 Replication

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    The serine protease inhibitors (serpins) are anti-inflammatory proteins that have various functions. By screening a diverse panel of viruses, we demonstrate that the serpin antithrombin III (ATIII) has a broad-spectrum anti-viral activity for HIV-1, HCV and HSV. To investigate the mechanism of action in more detail we investigated the HIV-1 inhibition. Using gene-expression arrays we found that multiple host cell signal transduction pathways were activated by ATIII in HIV-1 infected cells but not in uninfected controls. Moreover, the signal pathways initiated by ATIII treatment, were more than 200-fold increased by the use of heparin-activated ATIII. The most up-regulated transcript in HIV-1 infected cells was prostaglandin synthetase-2 (PTGS2). Furthermore, we found that over-expression of PTGS2 reduced levels of HIV-1 replication in human PBMC. These findings suggest a central role for serpins in the host innate anti-viral response. Host factors such as PTGS2 elicited by ATIII treatment could be exploited in the development of novel anti-viral interventions

    Recurrent Signature Patterns in HIV-1 B Clade Envelope Glycoproteins Associated with either Early or Chronic Infections

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    Here we have identified HIV-1 B clade Envelope (Env) amino acid signatures from early in infection that may be favored at transmission, as well as patterns of recurrent mutation in chronic infection that may reflect common pathways of immune evasion. To accomplish this, we compared thousands of sequences derived by single genome amplification from several hundred individuals that were sampled either early in infection or were chronically infected. Samples were divided at the outset into hypothesis-forming and validation sets, and we used phylogenetically corrected statistical strategies to identify signatures, systematically scanning all of Env. Signatures included single amino acids, glycosylation motifs, and multi-site patterns based on functional or structural groupings of amino acids. We identified signatures near the CCR5 co-receptor-binding region, near the CD4 binding site, and in the signal peptide and cytoplasmic domain, which may influence Env expression and processing. Two signatures patterns associated with transmission were particularly interesting. The first was the most statistically robust signature, located in position 12 in the signal peptide. The second was the loss of an N-linked glycosylation site at positions 413–415; the presence of this site has been recently found to be associated with escape from potent and broad neutralizing antibodies, consistent with enabling a common pathway for immune escape during chronic infection. Its recurrent loss in early infection suggests it may impact fitness at the time of transmission or during early viral expansion. The signature patterns we identified implicate Env expression levels in selection at viral transmission or in early expansion, and suggest that immune evasion patterns that recur in many individuals during chronic infection when antibodies are present can be selected against when the infection is being established prior to the adaptive immune response

    Cyclophilin A-Deficient Mice Are Resistant to Immunosuppression by Cyclosporine

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    Effect of ATIII on gene expression in uninfected PBMC.

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    <p>Gene-regulation of uninfected PBMC treated with different doses of ATIII, each dose compared to an uninfected, ATIII untreated vehicle control. For signal transduction gene analysis, 10<sup>5</sup> PBMC were infected with a 0.01 MOI of primary isolate HIV-1 (HIV 89.6) for 2 h at 37Β°C. Cells were washed and treated with 6.8, 34 and 68 Β΅M ATIII for 48 h. Total RNA was purified and a RT-PCR expression array was performed. The expression of 84 genes from 20 different signal transduction pathways was analyzed. Genes with significant changes in gene expression (<i>p</i><0.05, nβ€Š=β€Š3) compared to controls are shown. Significance was calculated using the ΔΔC<sub>t</sub> method for three independent experiments.</p

    Effect of ATIII on gene expression in acutely HIV infected PBMC.

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    <p>(<b>A</b>) Gene up-regulation of acutely infected PBMC after treatment with different doses of ATIII, each dose compared to infected untreated control. (<b>B</b>) Gene down-regulation of acutely infected PBMC after treatment with different doses of ATIII, each dose compared to an infected untreated control. For signal transduction gene analysis, 10<sup>5</sup> PBMC were infected with a 0.01 MOI of primary isolate HIV-1 (HIV 89.6) for 2 h at 37Β°C. Cells were washed and treated with 6.8, 34 and 68 Β΅M ATIII for 48 h. Total RNA was purified and a RT-PCR expression array was performed. The gene expression levels from 20 different signal transduction pathways were analyzed. Genes with significant changes in gene expression (<i>p</i><0.05, nβ€Š=β€Š3) compared to controls are shown. Significance was calculated using the ΔΔC<sub>t</sub> method for three independent experiments.</p

    Effect of heparin activated ATIII (hep-ATIII) on gene expression in acutely HIV infected PBMC.

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    <p>(<b>A</b>) Gene up-regulation of acutely infected PBMC after treatment with different doses of hep-ATIII, each dose compared to infected hep-ATIII untreated vehicle control. (<b>B</b>) Gene down-regulation of acutely infected PBMC after treatment with different doses of hep-ATIII, each dose compared to infected hep-ATIII untreated vehicle control. For signal transduction gene analysis, 10<sup>5</sup> PBMC were infected with a 0.01 MOI of primary isolate HIV-1 (HIV 89.6) for 2 hrs at 37Β°C. Cells were washed and treated with 0.09, 0.17 and 0.4 Β΅M hep-ATIII for 48 h. Total RNA was purified and a RT-PCR expression array was performed. The expression levels of genes of 20 different signal transduction pathways (84 genes) were analyzed. Genes with significant changes in gene expression (<i>p</i><0.05, nβ€Š=β€Š3) compared to controls are show. Significance was calculated using the ΔΔC<sub>t</sub> method for three independent experiments.</p
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