Journal article
Control of viremia and prevention of AIDS following immunotherapy of SIV-infected macaques with peptide-pulsed blood
R De Rose, CS Fernandez, MZ Smith, CJ Batten, S Alcântara, V Peut, E Rollman, L Loh, RD Mason, K Wilson, MG Law, AJ Handley, SJ Kent
Plos Pathogens | Published : 2008
Abstract
Effective immunotherapies for HIV are needed. Drug therapies are life-long with significant toxicities. Dendritic-cell based immunotherapy approaches are promising but impractical for widespread use. A simple immunotherapy, reinfusing fresh autologous blood cells exposed to overlapping SIV peptides for 1 hour ex vivo, was assessed for the control of SIVmac251 replication in 36 pigtail macaques. An initial set of four immunizations was administered under antiretroviral cover and a booster set of three immunizations administered 6 months later. Vaccinated animals were randomized to receive Gag peptides alone or peptides spanning all nine SIV proteins. High-level, SIV-specific CD4 and CD8 T-cel..
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Grants
Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council