Introduction: HIV-infected individuals have evidence of intestinal microbial translocation which is associated with immune activation and unfavorable clinical outcomes. Rifaximin, a non-absorbable antibiotic which reduces microbial translocation in other disease states, was shown to have a marginal beneficial effect on microbial translocation, T-cell activation, and inflammation in a multisite randomized trial (ACTG A5286; NCT01466595) of HIV-infected persons with poor immunologic recovery receiving ART. Here, we report analysis of the rectal microbiome changes associated with that trial.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: This study was conducted to test for possible circadian control of viral infection in live animals using bioluminescence imaging of a firefly luciferase transgene.
Methods: Transgenic mice expressing the firefly luciferase gene under the control of the promoter and enhancer of the human cytomegalovirus major immediate-early gene (CMV::luc) were examined through whole-animal imaging. Mice were crossed with HRS/J hairless albino mice to improve imaging of deep structures.