Abstract

BackgroundEvaluation of microbicides for prevention of HIV-1 infection in macaque models for vaginal infection has indicated that the concentrations of active compounds needed for protection by far exceed levels sufficient for complete inhibition of infection in vitro. These experiments were done in the absence of seminal plasma (SP), a vehicle for sexual transmission of the virus. To gain insight into the possible effect of SP on the performance of selected microbicides, their anti-HIV-1 activity in the presence, and absence of SP, was determined.MethodsThe inhibitory activity of compounds against the X4 virus, HIV-1 IIIB, and the R5 virus, HIV-1 BaL was determined using TZM-bl indicator cells and quantitated by measuring β-galactosidase induced by infection. The virucidal properties of cellulose acetate 1,2-benzene-dicarboxylate (CAP), the only microbicide provided in water insoluble, micronized form, in the presence of SP was measured.ResultsThe HIV-1 inhibitory activity of the polymeric microbicides, poly(naphthalene sulfonate), cellulose sulfate, carrageenan, CAP (in soluble form) and polystyrene sulfonate, respectively, was considerably (range ≈ 4 to ≈ 73-fold) diminished in the presence of SP (33.3%). Formulations of micronized CAP, providing an acidic buffering system even in the presence of an SP volume excess, effectively inactivated HIV-1 infectivity.ConclusionThe data presented here suggest that the in vivo efficacy of polymeric microbicides, acting as HIV-1 entry inhibitors, might become at least partly compromised by the inevitable presence of SP. These possible disadvantages could be overcome by combining the respective polymers with acidic pH buffering systems (built-in for formulations of micronized CAP) or with other anti-HIV-1 compounds, the activity of which is not affected by SP, e.g. reverse transcriptase and zinc finger inhibitors.

Highlights

  • Evaluation of microbicides for prevention of HIV-1 infection in macaque models for vaginal infection has indicated that the concentrations of active compounds needed for protection by far exceed levels sufficient for complete inhibition of infection in vitro

  • The HIV-1 inhibitory activity of several polymeric candidate microbicides is diminished in the presence of seminal plasma Inhibition of HIV-1 IIIB and HIV-1 BaL [8,26] infection, respectively, of TZM-bl cells [19] by polymeric candidate microbicides in the absence or presence of SP was investigated

  • Candidate anti-HIV-1 topical microbicides have been evaluated for virus inhibitory activities in vitro and efficacy in animal models mostly without considering the possible effects semen/seminal plasma may have on the ultimate performance of these compositions

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Summary

Introduction

Evaluation of microbicides for prevention of HIV-1 infection in macaque models for vaginal infection has indicated that the concentrations of active compounds needed for protection by far exceed levels sufficient for complete inhibition of infection in vitro These experiments were done in the absence of seminal plasma (SP), a vehicle for sexual transmission of the virus. BMC Infectious Diseases 2006, 6:150 http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2334/6/150 are female rhesus macaques to whom anti-HIV-1 products and either simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) or HIV1/SIV hybrid viruses (SHIVs) are consecutively applied in the vagina [2,3,4,5,6,7] Results obtained in this animal model have indicated that the concentrations of anti-HIV-1 compounds in microbicide formulations adequate to prevent vaginal infection exceed by several orders of magnitude concentrations sufficient for complete inhibition of infection in in vitro systems [8,9,10]. Antiretroviral drugs targeted to HIV-1 reverse transcriptase, UC781 [12,13] and TMC 120 [14,15], respectively, and to the zinc fingers of the HIV-1 nucleocapsid protein NCp7 [16,17,18] were included in control experiments

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