| Literature DB >> 29213273 |
Daryl Anne Victoria Weatherley1, Michael Terence Boswell1, Sarah L Rowland-Jones1.
Abstract
In the past decade, studies of innate immune activity against HIV-1 and other retroviruses have revealed a powerful array of host factors that can attack the virus at various stages of its life cycle in human and primate cells, raising the prospect that these antiviral factors could be manipulated in immunotherapeutic strategies for HIV infection. This has not proved straightforward: while HIV accessory genes encode proteins that subvert or destroy many of these restriction factors, others, such as human TRIM5α show limited potency against HIV-1. However, HIV-1 is much more susceptible to simian versions of TRIM5α: could this information be translated into the development of an effective gene therapy for HIV infection? Reigniting research into the restriction factor TRIM5α in the era of superior gene editing technology such as CRISPR-Cas9 presents an exciting opportunity to revisit this prospect.Entities:
Keywords: CRISPR-Cas9; HIV-1; HIV-2; PRYSPRY/B30.2; TRIM5α; adeno-associated virus; gene editing
Year: 2017 PMID: 29213273 PMCID: PMC5702620 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.01616
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
TRIM5 polymorphisms and HIV disease associations.
| Genotype | TRIM5α domain affected | Cohort population | HIV disease association | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | H43Y | RING | Central and South American | Diminished ability of TRIM5α to restrict HIV replication | ( |
| 2 | 43Y homozygote | RING | Hans and Dai Chinese | Allele appears paradoxically to protect against HIV infection | ( |
| 3 | G249D | Linker 2 region between coiled-coil and PRYSPRY domains | Japanese and Indian | Associated with increased susceptibility to HIV-1 infection | ( |
| 4 | R136Q | Coiled coil | Kenyan | Protects against infection | ( |
| 5 | R136Q | Coiled coil | European Americans | More frequent in HIV-infected population | ( |
| 6 | H43-136Q haplotype | RING and coiled coil | North-East Brazil | Increased frequency in HIV uninfected controls | ( |
| 7 | G110R | B-box | Japanese | Increased susceptibility to HIV infection | ( |
Figure 1A theoretical model of TRIM5α gene therapy for HIV cure. This flow diagram demonstrates a theoretical model for ex vivo gene editing in hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) to effect the R332P substitution using the newly described SaCRISPR-Cas9 system. HSCs harvested from an HIV-positive patient would be transduced with an adeno-associated virus (AAV) vector bearing the Cas9 apparatus, sgRNAs targeting TRIM5, and a repair template. A mixed population of HSCs would then be reinfused and among them, transgenic long-term repopulating HSCs would engraft, resulting in a durable subset of anti-HIV CD4+ T cells with a survival advantage in the face of viral challenge.