S. Cao et al. (mar 2019)
Science advances 5 3 eaav6322
Hybrid nanocarriers incorporating mechanistically distinct drugs for lymphatic CD4+ T cell activation and HIV-1 latency reversal.
A proposed strategy to cure HIV uses latency-reversing agents (LRAs) to reactivate latent proviruses for purging HIV reservoirs. A variety of LRAs have been identified,but none has yet proven effective in reducing the reservoir size in vivo. Nanocarriers could address some major challenges by improving drug solubility and safety,providing sustained drug release,and simultaneously delivering multiple drugs to target tissues and cells. Here,we formulated hybrid nanocarriers that incorporate physicochemically diverse LRAs and target lymphatic CD4+ T cells. We identified one LRA combination that displayed synergistic latency reversal and low cytotoxicity in a cell model of HIV and in CD4+ T cells from virologically suppressed patients. Furthermore,our targeted nanocarriers selectively activated CD4+ T cells in nonhuman primate peripheral blood mononuclear cells as well as in murine lymph nodes,and substantially reduced local toxicity. This nanocarrier platform may enable new solutions for delivering anti-HIV agents for an HIV cure.
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Albert BJ et al. (AUG 2017)
Scientific reports 7 1 7456
Combinations of isoform-targeted histone deacetylase inhibitors and bryostatin analogues display remarkable potency to activate latent HIV without global T-cell activation.
Current antiretroviral therapy (ART) for HIV/AIDS slows disease progression by reducing viral loads and increasing CD4 counts. Yet ART is not curative due to the persistence of CD4+ T-cell proviral reservoirs that chronically resupply active virus. Elimination of these reservoirs through the administration of synergistic combinations of latency reversing agents (LRAs),such as histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors and protein kinase C (PKC) modulators,provides a promising strategy to reduce if not eradicate the viral reservoir. Here,we demonstrate that largazole and its analogues are isoform-targeted histone deacetylase inhibitors and potent LRAs. Significantly,these isoform-targeted HDAC inhibitors synergize with PKC modulators,namely bryostatin-1 analogues (bryologs). Implementation of this unprecedented LRA combination induces HIV-1 reactivation to unparalleled levels and avoids global T-cell activation within resting CD4+ T-cells.
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Vanwalscappel B et al. (NOV 2016)
Virology 500 247--258
Genetic and phenotypic analyses of sequential vpu alleles from HIV-infected IFN-treated patients.
Treatment of HIV-infected patients with IFN-α results in significant,but clinically insufficient,reductions of viremia. IFN induces the expression of several antiviral proteins including BST-2,which inhibits HIV by multiple mechanisms. The viral protein Vpu counteracts different effects of BST-2. We thus asked if Vpu proteins from IFN-treated patients displayed improved anti-BST-2 activities as compared to Vpu from baseline. Deep-sequencing analyses revealed that in five of seven patients treated by IFN-α for a concomitant HCV infection in the absence of antiretroviral drugs,the dominant Vpu sequences differed before and during treatment. In three patients,vpu alleles that emerged during treatment improved virus replication in the presence of IFN-α,and two of them conferred improved virus budding from cells expressing BST-2. Differences were observed for the ability to down-regulate CD4,while all Vpu variants potently down-modulated BST-2 from the cell surface. This report discloses relevant consequences of IFN-treatment on HIV properties.
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Kourjian G et al. (MAY 2016)
Journal of Immunology 196 9 3595--607
HIV Protease Inhibitor-Induced Cathepsin Modulation Alters Antigen Processing and Cross-Presentation.
Immune recognition by T cells relies on the presentation of pathogen-derived peptides by infected cells,but the persistence of chronic infections calls for new approaches to modulate immune recognition. Ag cross-presentation,the process by which pathogen Ags are internalized,degraded,and presented by MHC class I,is crucial to prime CD8 T cell responses. The original degradation of Ags is performed by pH-dependent endolysosomal cathepsins. In this article,we show that HIV protease inhibitors (PIs) prescribed to HIV-infected persons variably modulate cathepsin activities in human APCs,dendritic cells and macrophages,and CD4 T cells,three cell subsets infected by HIV. Two HIV PIs acted in two complementary ways on cathepsin hydrolytic activities: directly on cathepsins and indirectly on their regulators by inhibiting Akt kinase activities,reducing NADPH oxidase 2 activation,and lowering phagolysosomal reactive oxygen species production and pH,which led to enhanced cathepsin activities. HIV PIs modified endolysosomal degradation and epitope production of proteins from HIV and other pathogens in a sequence-dependent manner. They altered cross-presentation of Ags by dendritic cells to epitope-specific T cells and T cell-mediated killing. HIV PI-induced modulation of Ag processing partly changed the MHC self-peptidome displayed by primary human cells. This first identification,to our knowledge,of prescription drugs modifying the regulation of cathepsin activities and the MHC-peptidome may provide an alternate therapeutic approach to modulate immune recognition in immune disease beyond HIV.
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