Virologic and serologic characteristics of a natural chimpanzee lentivirus infection

M Peeters, W Janssens, M Vanden Haesevelde, K Fransen, B Willems, L Heyndrickx, L Kestens, P Piot, G van der Groen, J Heeney

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Abstract

This study set out to characterize the unique features of natural lentivirus infection in chimpanzees over time. The virologic and serologic characteristics of this infection were followed longitudinally in a naturally infected chimpanzee together with a small cohort of experimentally HIV-1-infected chimpanzees. The subsequent isolates from the naturally infected chimpanzee were all non-syncytium forming (NSI) versus syncytium forming in the experimentally infected animals. In contrast to HIV-1-infected chimpanzees virus load was higher and plasma viremia occurred but in a cyclic pattern. Serologic followup suggested the development of neutralizing antibodies with subsequent escape of new isolates. Interestingly, the sequence of the principal neutralizing (V3 loop) domain (of HIV-1) remained constant over time. Antibodies to peptides from the V3 loop were type specific. The occurrence of persistent, fluctuating plasma viremia and NSI-type virus variants of this natural lentivirus infection are unique characteristics not previously reported in experimentally infected chimpanzees.
Original languageEnglish
JournalVirology
Volume211
Issue number1
Pages (from-to)312-315
Number of pages4
ISSN0042-6822
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1995

Keywords

  • B780-tropical-medicine
  • Viral diseases
  • Lentivirus
  • SIV
  • Genetics
  • Chimpanzees
  • Primates

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