Abstract

Objective of the present study was then to assess the antiviral activity of the protease inhibitor amprenavir in macrophages (M/M), and to compare it with its efficacy in peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL). M/M were obtained from blood of sero-negative healthy donors and infected with M-tropic HIV-1 strain (HIV-1 Ba-L). The stabilized infection was assessed by monitoring the HIV-1 p24 gag antigen production in the supernatants of M/M cultures. In the setting of acute infection (treatment before HIV-1 challenge), amprenavir showed substantial activity both in M/M and PBL at similar concentrations (EC 50: 0.011 and 0.031 μM, respectively); complete inhibition of HIV-1 replication was achieved in both cell types at concentration of about 2 μM. In the setting of chronical infection (i.e. antiviral treatment several days after established infection), an antiviral effect of amprenavir was achieved in M/M, but at concentrations higher than those active in acutely infected M/M (EC 50: 0.72 μM, EC 90: 18.2 μM). The antiviral effect in chronically infected M/M was sustained for at least 2 weeks of continuous treatment. These findings suggest that amprenavir (at relatively high concentrations) has a clinically relevant antiviral effect in persistently infected reservoirs of HIV.

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