Oral Combinational Antiretroviral Treatment in HIV-1 Infected Humanized Mice

JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS(2022)

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Abstract
The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) pandemic continues to spread unabated worldwide, and currently, there is no vaccine available against HIV. Although combinational antiretroviral therapy (cART) has been successful in suppressing viral replication, it cannot completely eradicate the reservoir from HIV-infected individuals. A safe and effective cure strategy for HIV infection will require multipronged methods, and therefore the advancements of animal models for HIV-1 infection are pivotal for the development of HIV cure research. Humanized mice recapitulate key features of HIV-1 infection. The humanized mouse model can be infected by HIV-1 and viral replication can be controlled with cART regimens. Moreover, cART interruption results in a prompt viral rebound in humanized mice. However, administration of cART to the animal can be ineffective, difficult, or toxic, and many clinically relevant cART regimens are unable to be optimally utilized. Along with being potentially unsafe for researchers, administration of cART by a commonly used intensive daily injection procedure induces stress by physical restraint of the animal. The novel oral cART method to treat HIV-1 infected humanized mice described in this article resulted in suppression of viremia below the detection level, increased rate of CD4+ restoration, and improved overall health in HIV-1 infected humanized mice.
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