via PLoS ONE
Abstract:
Sexual HIV-1 transmission by vaginal route is the most predominant mode  of viral transmission, resulting in millions of new infections every  year. In the absence of an effective vaccine, there is an urgent need to  develop other alternative methods of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP).  Many novel drugs that are currently approved for clinical use also show  great potential to prevent viral sexual transmission when administered  systemically. A small animal model that permits rapid preclinical  evaluation of potential candidates for their systemic PrEP efficacy will  greatly enhance progress in this area of investigation. We have  previously shown that RAG-hu humanized mouse model permits HIV-1 mucosal  transmission via both vaginal and rectal routes and displays CD4 T cell  loss typical to that seen in the human. Thus far systemic PrEP studies  have been primarily limited to RT inhibitors exemplified by tenofovir  and emtricitabine. In these proof-of-concept studies we evaluated two  new classes of clinically approved drugs with different modes of action  namely, an integrase inhibitor raltegravir and a CCR5 inhibitor  maraviroc as potential systemically administered chemo-prophylactics.  Our results showed that oral administration of either of these drugs  fully protects against vaginal HIV-1 challenge in the RAG-hu mouse  model. Based on these results both these drugs show great promise for  further development as orally administered PrEPs.
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