Microbicides 2008: Third-generation microbicides might act as ‘bacterial vaccine’
By Gus Cairns (Aidsmap news - London) 4 March 2008: Studies are underway of genetically engineering naturally-occurring vaginal bacteria to produce microbicides against HIV, and in one case such a strategy has already proved effective in preventing HIV infection in monkeys, the Microbicides 2008 Conference heard last week in Delhi.
http://www.aidsmap.com/en/news/B304319F-D6CC-495E-B225-1365F8AA6DDD.asp
Qiang Xu of ‘bacterial therapeutics’ company Osel, Inc. of
California reviewed the latest progress on getting naturally-occurring
Lactobacillus bacteria to produce the microbicide Cyanovirin-N.
Cyanovirin-N is a protein originally derived from algae that has shown
promising efficacy as both a vaginal and a rectal microbicide. However
it is a large molecule that might be prohibitively expensive to develop
as a gel.
Dr Xu’s team inserted a gene into the genome of Lactobacillus jensenii
1153, a variety of the naturally-occurring bacteria that colonise the
vagina. These already confer some protective effect by generating
hydrogen peroxide, which has a microbicidal effect – see this report
for a study of lactobacilli presented at CROI.
The researchers were able to induce the modified bacteria to colonise
the vaginas of female rhesus macaques (which naturally harbour
lactobacilli) for over two months. In vitro experiments showed that the
Cyanovirin-N produced inhibited CCR5-tropic HIV, with a 50% inhibitory
concentration one one nanomolar, which is comparable to systemic
antiretrovirals.
Studies are needed to establish whether the colonizing bacteria can
produce enough Cyanovirin-N in situ to have a microbicidal effect, and
also on fermentation techniques to produce bulk amounts of the
bacteria. Asked about the possibility of escape of genetically-modified
bacteria, Dr Xu said that they could be completely cleared with a short
course of the antibiotic azithromycin and did not survive outside the
body in water or air.
Another novel approach is to engineer altered versions of
naturally-occurring CCR5 inhibitors which act, like maraviroc and
vicriviroc, the ones developed as treatments, by blocking a co-receptor
molecule needed by HIV to gain entry to CD4 cells.
The natural ligand (molecule that naturally attaches to) the CCR5
co-receptor is the chemokine molecule RANTES, which acts as a means of
mobilising immune-cell activity in cases of injury or infection.
Because of RANTES’ immune activity and short half-life it cannot be
used as an anti-HIV treatment or preventative in itself.
Dr Oliver Hartley of the University of Geneva in Switzerland has been
developing an analogue or altered version called PSC-RANTES as an HIV
treatment. This works by inducing CD4 cells to downregulate their CCR5
receptors, in other words to pull the molecules inside the cell surface
where they can no longer act as chemokine or viral receptors.
In experiments in monkeys, PSC-RANTES was shown to protect against
transmission in the macaque model – see this report for progress up to
the previous microbicide conference. However PSC-RANTES still acts as
an immune-signalling chemical (it excites immune activity) and would
also be impossible to produce in bulk cost-effectively.
Hartley generated a variety of other RANTES analogues and has found one
called 5P12-RANTES that can be manufactured in bulk by fermentation
methods. It acts as a CCR5 inhibitor but it neither induced CCR5
downregulation nor immune activation. It shows equivalent activity to
PSC-RANTES and in the macaque model, when applied topically as
one-micromolar solutions in saline, protected five out of five female
macaques from vaginal SHIV infection.
Finally, in experiments combining both approaches, Luca Vangelista of
the San Raffaele Scientific Institute in Italy has engineered the same
lactobacilli as in the Xu study to produce human-type RANTES and is
currently engineering another variant that will produce an analogue
called C1C5-RANTES, and also small peptides – sections – derived from
RANTES to see if these have anti-HIV activity.
References
Xu Q. Development of a live topical microbicide for women. Microbicides
2008 Conference, Delhi. Abstract AO17-221. 2008.
Hartley O. Fully recombinant chemokine analogues provide complete
protection in the macaque vaginal challenge model. Microbicides 2008
Conference, Delhi. Abstract AO21-286. 2008.
Vangelista L. Expression of RANTES derivatives in Lactobacilli: a novel
strategy for the development of vaginal microbicides. Microbicides 2008
Conference, Delhi. Abstract AO18-235. 2008.

