Literature DB >> 17168802

Attacking HIV provirus: therapeutic strategies to disrupt persistent infection.

David M Margolis1, Nancy M Archin.   

Abstract

The therapeutic armamentarium for human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection continues to expand. New targets such as entry and integration have recently been successfully exploited. However, HIV-infected patients in need of treatment are currently committed to lifelong suppressive therapy. The persistence of integrated HIV DNA genomes capable of producing virus is a fundamental obstacle to the eradication or cure of HIV infection. Rational molecular or pharmacologic strategies to eliminate persistent HIV proviral genomes are an unaddressed therapeutic need. Coupled with potent antiretroviral therapy, treatments that could efficiently deplete the persistent DNA reservoir of HIV could radically alter treatment paradigms. Prior attempts to target persistent proviral infection deployed intensive antiretroviral therapy (ART) in combination with global inducers of T-cell activation. Initial trials of this approach were unsuccessful. Non-specific T-cell activation may induce high-level viral replication above a level that can be fully contained by ART, while increasing the susceptibility of uninfected cells. Selective targeting of HIV provirus via agents that induce the expression of quiescent HIV, but have limited effects on the uninfected host cell is an alternate approach to attack latent HIV. Recent studies define the role of repressive chromatin structure in maintaining HIV quiescence, and suggest that mechanisms that remodel chromatin about the HIV promoter are a possible therapeutic target. Other studies have uncovered specific factors that may act to induce or maintain latency by limiting the efficiency of HIV gene expression. Attempts to deplete latent HIV using drugs that alter chromatin structure have entered clinical study.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17168802     DOI: 10.2174/187152606779025824

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Infect Disord Drug Targets        ISSN: 1871-5265


  4 in total

1.  Isolation of a cellular factor that can reactivate latent HIV-1 without T cell activation.

Authors:  Hung-Chih Yang; Lin Shen; Robert F Siliciano; Joel L Pomerantz
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2009-03-31       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Clonal sequences recovered from plasma from patients with residual HIV-1 viremia and on intensified antiretroviral therapy are identical to replicating viral RNAs recovered from circulating resting CD4+ T cells.

Authors:  Jeffrey A Anderson; Nancie M Archin; William Ince; Daniel Parker; Ann Wiegand; John M Coffin; Joann Kuruc; Joseph Eron; Ronald Swanstrom; David M Margolis
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2011-03-02       Impact factor: 5.103

3.  Bryostatin modulates latent HIV-1 infection via PKC and AMPK signaling but inhibits acute infection in a receptor independent manner.

Authors:  Rajeev Mehla; Shalmali Bivalkar-Mehla; Ruonan Zhang; Indhira Handy; Helmut Albrecht; Shailendra Giri; Prakash Nagarkatti; Mitzi Nagarkatti; Ashok Chauhan
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-06-16       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Small-molecule screening using a human primary cell model of HIV latency identifies compounds that reverse latency without cellular activation.

Authors:  Hung-Chih Yang; Sifei Xing; Liang Shan; Karen O'Connell; Jason Dinoso; Anding Shen; Yan Zhou; Cynthia K Shrum; Yefei Han; Jun O Liu; Hao Zhang; Joseph B Margolick; Robert F Siliciano
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2009-10-01       Impact factor: 14.808

  4 in total

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