| Literature DB >> 36098885 |
Maria E Cardona1,2, Jorma Hinkula3, Kristin Gustafsson1, Birger Christensson4, Britta Wahren5, Abdalla J Mohamed1, C I Edvard Smith1, H Jose Arteaga1,6.
Abstract
Treatment with RNAi against HIV-1 transcripts efficiently inhibits viral replication but induces selection of escape mutants; therefore, the CCR5 coreceptor was suggested as an additional target. Blocking viral and host transcripts improved the antiviral effect. We have used short hairpin RNA (shRNA) targeting the human CCR5 (shCCR5) or the HIV-1 rev (shRev) transcripts to demonstrate distinctive properties of anti-CCR5 shRNA: shCCR5 induced more sustained protection than shRev; partial reduction in CCR5 expression substantially decreased HIV-1 infection, and shCCR5 performed better than shRev in the mixed shRNA-treated and untreated cultures. These observations indicate that CCR5 inhibitors should be conveniently included in HIV-1 gene silencing treatment schedules when only a certain cell fraction is protected to further reduce endogenous virus in a properly ART-treated HIV-1 infected individual.Entities:
Keywords: CCR5 receptor; HIV-1; RNA interference; Rev gene
Year: 2022 PMID: 36098885 DOI: 10.1007/s11033-022-07899-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Biol Rep ISSN: 0301-4851 Impact factor: 2.742