Attenuating Inflammation to Restore GI Tract Integrity and Reduce Viral Reservoirs During cART

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $751,962 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY Despite advances in combination antiretroviral therapy (cART), human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection remains a major public health burden. Current therapeutic regimens often achieve complete viral suppression but require lifelong adherence, as the virus quickly rebounds from tissue and cellular reservoirs following treatment interruption. Moreover, chronic inflammation persists in cART-suppressed individuals and contributes to comorbidities even in the absence of detectable viremia. Thus, a major goal in HIV research is focused on approaches that lead to either sustained viral control or elimination of viral reservoirs (either a `functional' or `sterilizing' cure), with the additional objective to develop approaches that reduce the persistent inflammatory process that complicates disease-free remission during cART treatment. Recent work has highlighted the critical role of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract in HIV persistence, with the GI tract comprising the vast majority of viral reservoirs in the body during cART. Importantly, residual systemic inflammation observed in HIV infected, cART suppressed individuals appears driven by increased GI tract permeability. A substantial body of research has shown a critical role for TNFα in perpetuating the pro- inflammatory cycle that occurs with other GI disorders, such as inflammatory bowel disease. Notably, TNFα has been shown to contribute to the pro-inflammatory milieu that is elevated in HIV infected individuals, but the role of TNFα in GI-associated pathology during HIV disease is not well understood. We hypothesize that persistent damage to the GI tract epithelial barrier is a major cause of residual local and systemic inflammation in HIV infected individuals on cART, which plays an important role in viral reservoir persistence within the GI tract, and attenuating GI tract, and systemic, inflammation will lead to restored gut restoration, immune homeostasis and reduced reservoir persistence. TNFα therefore represents an attractive target for mitigating the inflammatory milieu during the chronic phase of HIV infection. Thus, two different approaches to target TNFα will be utilized in a non-human primate model of HIV infection, i) an FDA-approved antibody against TNFα therapy (adalimumab, Humira) and ii) a novel small molecule inhibitor of the downstream kinase, RIPK1. The extent and characteristics of GI tract pathology and the restoration of immune homeostasis (Aim 1) and the quantity, distribution, and characteristics of the viral reservoir within the GI tract (Aim 2) will be evaluated throughout treatment and following the conclusion of the experiments. Discovering a critical role for TNFα in modulating the GI manifestations of HIV would have a significant impact on the direction of future HIV research and treatment. Moreover, use of either a novel inhibitor that is currently in clinical development, or the re-purposing of an FDA-approved drug, as new therapeutic modalities...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10456915
Project number
5R01DK119945-05
Recipient
OREGON HEALTH & SCIENCE UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
JACOB D ESTES
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$751,962
Award type
5
Project period
2018-09-20 → 2024-08-31