Abstract

Pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) with anti-viral drugs is currently in clinical trials for the prevention of HIV infection. Induction of adaptive immune responses to virus exposures during anti-viral drug administration, i.e., a “chemo-vaccination” effect, could contribute to PrEP efficacy. To study possible chemo-vaccination, we monitored humoral and cellular immune responses in nine rhesus macaques undergoing up to 14 weekly, low-dose SHIVSF162P3 rectal exposures. Six macaques concurrently received PrEP with intermittent, oral Truvada; three were no-PrEP controls. PrEP protected 4 macaques from infection. Two of the four showed evidence of chemo-vaccination, because they developed anti-SHIV CD4+ and CD8+ T cells; SHIV-specific antibodies were not detected. Control macaques showed no anti-SHIV immune responses before infection. Chemo-vaccination-induced T cell responses were robust (up to 3,940 SFU/106 PBMCs), predominantly central memory cells, short-lived (≤22 weeks), and appeared intermittently and with changing specificities. The two chemo-vaccinated macaques were virus-challenged again after 28 weeks of rest, after T cell responses had waned. One macaque was not protected from infection. The other macaque concurrently received additional PrEP. It remained uninfected and T cell responses were boosted during the additional virus exposures. In summary, we document and characterize PrEP-induced T cell chemo-vaccination. Although not protective after subsiding in one macaque, chemo-vaccination-induced T cells warrant more comprehensive analysis during peak responses for their ability to prevent or to control infections after additional exposures. Our findings highlight the importance of monitoring these responses in clinical PrEP trials and suggest that a combination of vaccines and PrEP potentially might enhance efficacy.

Highlights

  • Clinical trials are currently underway or are being completed to evaluate the efficacy of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) with antiretroviral (ARV) drugs for the prevention of HIV infection [1,2,3,4]

  • The animals received a second round of SHIV exposures 28 weeks after they were last exposed in the previous study, and we examined whether a history of SHIV exposures, PrEP, and/or T cell responses altered the outcome of additional SHIV challenges

  • We show that PrEP with anti-retrovirals can facilitate the development of adaptive T cell immunity in response to mucosal virus exposures

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Summary

Introduction

Clinical trials are currently underway or are being completed to evaluate the efficacy of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) with antiretroviral (ARV) drugs for the prevention of HIV infection [1,2,3,4]. It is possible that HIV exposure during prophylaxis can stimulate the immune system and induce adaptive immunity in the absence of productive infection. This would be akin to the observation that HIV-exposed, uninfected (EU) individuals can harbor HIV-specific immune responses associated with protection from infection ([5], and reviewed by Kulkarni et al [6]). The effect could be viewed as ‘‘chemo-vaccination’’, with natural HIV exposures providing antigenic stimulation to the immune system, while chemicals (ARVs) prevent or limit viral replication and productive infection. Benefits of chemo-vaccination could include prevention of virus acquisition, and improved viral control should breakthrough infections occur. The type and duration of immune responses induced by PrEP during repeated mucosal virus exposures can be dissected in these models

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