| Literature DB >> 23793227 |
Daniela Boehm1, Ryan J Conrad, Melanie Ott.
Abstract
Bromodomains are conserved protein modules of ~110 amino acids that bind acetylated lysine residues in histone and non-histone proteins. Bromodomains are present in many chromatin-associated transcriptional regulators and have been linked to diverse aspects of the HIV life cycle, including transcription and integration. Here, we review the role of bromodomain-containing proteins in HIV infection. We begin with a focus on acetylated viral factors, followed by a discussion of structural and biological studies defining the involvement of bromodomain proteins in the HIV life cycle. We end with an overview of promising new studies of bromodomain inhibitory compounds for the treatment of HIV latency.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23793227 PMCID: PMC3717722 DOI: 10.3390/v5061571
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Figure 1The human bromodomain family. (A) Phylogenetic tree of 57 human bromodomains. Those bromodomain-containing proteins that have been shown to interact with HIV proteins are denoted in red with the corresponding viral factor indicated alongside. Phylogenetic trees were generated using Seaview v4.4.1 with individual bromodomain sequences obtained from [23]. (B) Structure of the first bromodomain of BRD4 (purple) in complex with a diacetylated histone peptide (blue). Histone acetyllysine residues are shown in yellow. Structural representations in (B,C) were rendered using Chimera (UCSF) with PDB: 3UVW (C) Top view of interaction between first bromodomain of BRD4 and a diacetylated histone peptide. The hydrogen bond between the canonical bromodomain asparagine residue (N140 in BRD4) and the histone acetyllysine residue is shown in red with an estimated length of 2.94A.
Figure 2Role of bromodomain proteins in HIV infection. Bromodomain proteins implicated in HIV transcription, HIV integration, and cell cycle progression are schematized. Briefly, acetylated integrase displays enhanced enzymatic activity, yet generates an interaction interface for the TRIM28 bromodomain that in turn recruits the HDAC1 deacetylase, negatively impacting HIV integration. With respect to viral transcription, Tat acetylated at K50/51 interacts with BAF180 and Brg-1 within the PBAF complex to support viral transcription. Acetylated Tat also interacts with p300/CBP-Associated Factor (PCAF) to induce local acetylation of histones and potentially other factors at the site of viral transcription. BRD4 is present at the HIV long terminal repeat (LTR), yet is hypothesized as an intracellular competitor of Tat, while the role of BRD2 in HIV transcription is unknown. Tat also interacts with TAF1 to repress select cellular promoters. BRD4 and SP140 are both cell cycle regulators that interact with Vif, yet the bromodomain-dependence and functional significance of these interactions remain unclear.
Selected reported bromodomain inhibitors tested in models of HIV latency.
| Compound | Model of HIV latency | Effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| JQ1 | Ach2 | reactivation | [ |
| JQ1 | U1 | reactivation | |
| JQ1 | J-Lat 10.6 | reactivation | |
| JQ1 | Acutely infected primary CD4+ cells | reactivation | |
| JQ1 | J∆K | reactivation | [ |
| JQ1 | J-Lat A2 | reactivation | [ |
| JQ1 | Jurkat 1G5 | reactivation | |
| JQ1 | HeLa NH1 and NH2 | reactivation | |
| JQ1 | HeLa-T4 | reactivation | [ |
| JQ1 | Primary CD4+ T cells | reactivation | |
| JQ1 | Primary CD4+ T cells | inhibition | |
| JQ1 + Prostratin or PMA | J-Lat 6.3 | reactivation | |
| JQ1 + Prostratin or PMA | J-Lat 8.4 | reactivation | |
| JQ1 + Prostratin or PMA | J-Lat 9.2 | reactivation | |
| JQ1 + Prostratin or PMA | J-Lat 15.4 | reactivation | |
| JQ1 | J-Lat A2 | reactivation | [ |
| JQ1 | J-Lat A72 | reactivation | |
| JQ1 | infected primary Bc12-transduced CD4+ T cells | reactivation | |
| JQ1 | infected primary nonpolarized T helper cells | no reactivation | |
| I-BET | infected primary Bc12-transduced CD4+ T cells | reactivation | |
| I-BET | infected primary nonpolarized T helper cells | no reactivation | |
| I-Bet151 | J-Lat A2 | reactivation | |
| I-Bet151 | J-Lat A72 | reactivation | |
| I-Bet151 | infected primary Bc12-transduced CD4+ T cells | reactivation | |
| I-Bet151 | infected primary nonpolarized T helper cells | no reactivation | |
| MS417 | J-Lat A2 | reactivation | |
| MS417 | J-Lat A72 | reactivation | |
| MS417 | infected primary Bc12-transduced CD4+ T cells | reactivation | |
| MS417 | infected primary nonpolarized T helper cells | no reactivation |