| Literature DB >> 28407485 |
Ross A Pollack1, R Brad Jones2, Mihaela Pertea3, Katherine M Bruner1, Alyssa R Martin1, Allison S Thomas2, Adam A Capoferri4, Subul A Beg4, Szu-Han Huang2, Sara Karandish2, Haiping Hao5, Eitan Halper-Stromberg6, Patrick C Yong7, Colin Kovacs8, Erika Benko9, Robert F Siliciano4, Ya-Chi Ho10.
Abstract
Despite antiretroviral therapy, HIV-1 persists in memory CD4+ T cells, creating a barrier to cure. The majority of HIV-1 proviruses are defective and considered clinically irrelevant. Using cells from HIV-1-infected individuals and reconstructed patient-derived defective proviruses, we show that defective proviruses can be transcribed into RNAs that are spliced and translated. Proviruses with defective major splice donors (MSDs) can activate novel splice sites to produce HIV-1 transcripts, and cells with these proviruses can be recognized by HIV-1-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs). Further, cells with proviruses containing lethal mutations upstream of CTL epitopes can also be recognized by CTLs, potentially through aberrant translation. Thus, CTLs may change the landscape of HIV-1 proviruses by preferentially targeting cells with specific types of defective proviruses. Additionally, the expression of defective proviruses will need to be considered in the measurement of HIV-1 latency reversal.Entities:
Keywords: APOBEC-mediated G-to-A hypermutations; HIV-1 cure; HIV-1 latent reservoir; HIV-1 proviral landscape; alternative splicing; cell-associated HIV-1 RNA; cold-target inhibition; cytotoxic T lymphocytes; defective HIV-1 proviruses; defective ribosomal product
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28407485 PMCID: PMC5433942 DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2017.03.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Host Microbe ISSN: 1931-3128 Impact factor: 21.023