Elite Control, Gut CD4 T Cell Sparing, and Enhanced Mucosal T Cell Responses in Macaca nemestrina Infected by a Simian Immunodeficiency Virus Lacking a gp41 Trafficking Motif.
Matthew W BreedSamra E ElserWorkineh TorbenAndrea P O JordanPyone P AyeCecily MidkiffFaith SchiroChie SugimotoXavier Alvarez-HernandezRobert V BlairAnoma SomasunderamNetanya S UtayMarcelo J KurodaBapi PaharRoger W WisemanDavid H O'ConnorCelia C LaBrancheDavid C MontefioriMark MarshYuan LiMichael PiatakJeffrey D LifsonBrandon F KeelePatricia N FultzAndrew A LacknerJames A HoxiePublished in: Journal of virology (2015)
The pathogenesis of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) reflects a balance between viral replication, host innate and adaptive antiviral immune responses, and sustained immune activation that in humans and Asian macaques is associated with persistent viremia, immune escape, and AIDS. Among nonhuman primates, pig-tailed macaques following SIV infection are predisposed to more rapid disease progression than are rhesus macaques. Here, we show that disruption of a conserved tyrosine-based cellular trafficking motif in the viral transmembrane envelope glycoprotein cytoplasmic tail leads in pig-tailed macaques to a unique phenotype in which high levels of acute viral replication are followed by elite control, robust cellular responses in mucosal tissues, and no disease. Paradoxically, control of this virus in rhesus macaques is only partial, and progression to AIDS occurs. This novel model should provide a powerful tool to help identify host-specific determinants for viral control with potential relevance for vaccine development.