Literature DB >> 25723172

A hardwired HIV latency program.

Brandon S Razooky1, Anand Pai2, Katherine Aull3, Igor M Rouzine4, Leor S Weinberger5.   

Abstract

Biological circuits can be controlled by two general schemes: environmental sensing or autonomous programs. For viruses such as HIV, the prevailing hypothesis is that latent infection is controlled by cellular state (i.e., environment), with latency simply an epiphenomenon of infected cells transitioning from an activated to resting state. However, we find that HIV expression persists despite the activated-to-resting cellular transition. Mathematical modeling indicates that HIV's Tat positive-feedback circuitry enables this persistence and strongly controls latency. To overcome the inherent crosstalk between viral circuitry and cellular activation and to directly test this hypothesis, we synthetically decouple viral dependence on cellular environment from viral transcription. These circuits enable control of viral transcription without cellular activation and show that Tat feedback is sufficient to regulate latency independent of cellular activation. Overall, synthetic reconstruction demonstrates that a largely autonomous, viral-encoded program underlies HIV latency—potentially explaining why cell-targeted latency-reversing agents exhibit incomplete penetrance.
Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25723172      PMCID: PMC4395878          DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2015.02.009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell        ISSN: 0092-8674            Impact factor:   41.582


  52 in total

1.  Interlinked fast and slow positive feedback loops drive reliable cell decisions.

Authors:  Onn Brandman; James E Ferrell; Rong Li; Tobias Meyer
Journal:  Science       Date:  2005-10-21       Impact factor: 47.728

2.  Stochastic gene expression in a lentiviral positive-feedback loop: HIV-1 Tat fluctuations drive phenotypic diversity.

Authors:  Leor S Weinberger; John C Burnett; Jared E Toettcher; Adam P Arkin; David V Schaffer
Journal:  Cell       Date:  2005-07-29       Impact factor: 41.582

3.  Engineering of a monomeric green-to-red photoactivatable fluorescent protein induced by blue light.

Authors:  Nadya G Gurskaya; Vladislav V Verkhusha; Alexander S Shcheglov; Dmitry B Staroverov; Tatyana V Chepurnykh; Arkady F Fradkov; Sergey Lukyanov; Konstantin A Lukyanov
Journal:  Nat Biotechnol       Date:  2006-03-19       Impact factor: 54.908

4.  Transient-mediated fate determination in a transcriptional circuit of HIV.

Authors:  Leor S Weinberger; Roy D Dar; Michael L Simpson
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2008-03-16       Impact factor: 38.330

5.  Method for real-time monitoring of protein degradation at the single cell level.

Authors:  Lijuan Zhang; Nadya G Gurskaya; Ekaterina M Merzlyak; Dmitry B Staroverov; Nikolay N Mudrik; Olga N Samarkina; Leonid M Vinokurov; Sergey Lukyanov; Konstantin A Lukyanov
Journal:  Biotechniques       Date:  2007-04       Impact factor: 1.993

6.  A rapid, reversible, and tunable method to regulate protein function in living cells using synthetic small molecules.

Authors:  Laura A Banaszynski; Ling-Chun Chen; Lystranne A Maynard-Smith; A G Lisa Ooi; Thomas J Wandless
Journal:  Cell       Date:  2006-09-08       Impact factor: 41.582

7.  An HIV feedback resistor: auto-regulatory circuit deactivator and noise buffer.

Authors:  Leor S Weinberger; Thomas Shenk
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2007-01       Impact factor: 8.029

8.  Nuclear retention of multiply spliced HIV-1 RNA in resting CD4+ T cells.

Authors:  Kara G Lassen; Kasra X Ramyar; Justin R Bailey; Yan Zhou; Robert F Siliciano
Journal:  PLoS Pathog       Date:  2006-07       Impact factor: 6.823

9.  A real-time view of the TAR:Tat:P-TEFb complex at HIV-1 transcription sites.

Authors:  Dorothée Molle; Paolo Maiuri; Stéphanie Boireau; Edouard Bertrand; Anna Knezevich; Alessandro Marcello; Eugenia Basyuk
Journal:  Retrovirology       Date:  2007-05-30       Impact factor: 4.602

10.  HIV-1 latency in actively dividing human T cell lines.

Authors:  Rienk E Jeeninga; Ellen M Westerhout; Marja L van Gerven; Ben Berkhout
Journal:  Retrovirology       Date:  2008-04-25       Impact factor: 4.602

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  115 in total

1.  Abortive herpes simplex virus infection of nonneuronal cells results in quiescent viral genomes that can reactivate.

Authors:  Efrat M Cohen; Nir Avital; Meir Shamay; Oren Kobiler
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2019-12-23       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 2.  Kill: boosting HIV-specific immune responses.

Authors:  Lydie Trautmann
Journal:  Curr Opin HIV AIDS       Date:  2016-07       Impact factor: 4.283

3.  A Stronger Transcription Regulatory Circuit of HIV-1C Drives the Rapid Establishment of Latency with Implications for the Direct Involvement of Tat.

Authors:  Sutanuka Chakraborty; Manisha Kabi; Udaykumar Ranga
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2020-09-15       Impact factor: 5.103

Review 4.  Fate-Regulating Circuits in Viruses: From Discovery to New Therapy Targets.

Authors:  Anand Pai; Leor S Weinberger
Journal:  Annu Rev Virol       Date:  2017-08-11       Impact factor: 10.431

5.  Transient Thresholding: A Mechanism Enabling Noncooperative Transcriptional Circuitry to Form a Switch.

Authors:  Katherine H Aull; Elizabeth J Tanner; Matthew Thomson; Leor S Weinberger
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2017-06-06       Impact factor: 4.033

6.  Position effects influence HIV latency reversal.

Authors:  Heng-Chang Chen; Javier P Martinez; Eduard Zorita; Andreas Meyerhans; Guillaume J Filion
Journal:  Nat Struct Mol Biol       Date:  2016-11-21       Impact factor: 15.369

Review 7.  New targets for HIV drug discovery.

Authors:  Ana C Puhl; Alfredo Garzino Demo; Vadim A Makarov; Sean Ekins
Journal:  Drug Discov Today       Date:  2019-03-15       Impact factor: 7.851

8.  Probabilistic control of HIV latency and transactivation by the Tat gene circuit.

Authors:  Youfang Cao; Xue Lei; Ruy M Ribeiro; Alan S Perelson; Jie Liang
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2018-11-19       Impact factor: 11.205

9.  Single-Cell Analysis of Quiescent HIV Infection Reveals Host Transcriptional Profiles that Regulate Proviral Latency.

Authors:  Todd Bradley; Guido Ferrari; Barton F Haynes; David M Margolis; Edward P Browne
Journal:  Cell Rep       Date:  2018-10-02       Impact factor: 9.423

Review 10.  Mathematical Models of HIV Latency.

Authors:  Alison L Hill
Journal:  Curr Top Microbiol Immunol       Date:  2018       Impact factor: 4.291

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