Induction of AIDS-Like Disease in Macaque Monkeys with T-Cell Tropic Retrovirus STLV-III

N L Letvin(Harvard University), M. D. Daniel(Harvard University), Prabhat K. Sehgal(Harvard University), R. C. Desrosiers(Harvard University), R. D. Hunt(Harvard University), Linda M. Waldron(Harvard University), J J MacKey(Harvard University), Diane Schmidt(Harvard University), Laura V. Chalifoux(Harvard University), N. W. King(Harvard University)
Science
October 4, 1985
Cited by 618

Abstract

The T-cell tropic retrovirus of macaque monkeys STLV-III has morphologic, growth, and antigenic properties indicating that it is related to HTLV-III/LAV, the etiologic agent of the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) in humans. Four of six rhesus monkeys died within 160 days of STLV-III inoculation with a wasting syndrome, opportunistic infections, a primary retroviral encephalitis, and immunologic abnormalities including a decrease in T4+ peripheral blood lymphocytes. These data show that an immunodeficiency syndrome can be produced experimentally in a nonhuman primate by an agent from the HTLV-III/LAV group of retroviruses. The STLV-III-macaque system will thus provide a useful model for the study of antiviral agents and vaccine development for human AIDS.


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