SIV clearance from neonatal macaques following transient CCR5 depletion

Author:

Deere Jesse D.,Merriam David,Leggat Kawthar Machmach,Chang Wen-Lan William,Méndez-Lagares Gema,Kieu Hung,Dutra Joseph,Fontaine Justin,Lu Wenze,Chin Ning,Chen Connie,Tran Bryant Chi-Thien,Salinas Jessica,Miller Corey N.,Deeks Steven G.,Lifson Jeffrey D.,Engelman Kathleen,Magnani Diogo,Reimann Keith,Stevenson Mario,Hartigan-O’Connor Dennis J.

Abstract

SUMMARY PARAGRAPHTreatment of people with HIV (PWH) with antiretroviral therapy (ART) results in sustained suppression of viremia, but HIV persists indefinitely as integrated provirus in CD4-expressing cells. Intact persistent provirus, the “rebound competent viral reservoir” (RCVR), is the primary obstacle to achieving a cure. Most variants of HIV enter CD4+T cells by binding to the chemokine receptor, CCR5. The RCVR has been successfully depleted only in a handful of PWH following cytotoxic chemotherapy and bone marrow transplantation from donors with a mutation inCCR5. Here we show that long-term SIV remission and apparent cure can be achieved for infant macaques via targeted depletion of potential reservoir cells that express CCR5. Neonatal rhesus macaques were infected with virulent SIVmac251, then treated with ART beginning one week after infection, followed by treatment with either a CCR5/CD3-bispecific or a CD4-specific antibody, both of which depleted target cells and increased the rate of plasma viremia decrease. Upon subsequent cessation of ART, three of seven animals treated with CCR5/CD3-bispecific antibody rebounded quickly and two rebounded 3 or 6 months later. Remarkably, the other two animals remained aviremic and efforts to detect replication-competent virus were unsuccessful. Our results show that bispecific antibody treatment can achieve meaningful SIV reservoir depletion and suggest that functional HIV cure might be achievable for recently infected individuals having a restricted reservoir.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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