1. Polyamides reveal a role for repression in latency within resting T cells of HIV-infected donors.
- Author
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Ylisastigui L, Coull JJ, Rucker VC, Melander C, Bosch RJ, Brodie SJ, Corey L, Sodora DL, Dervan PB, and Margolis DM
- Subjects
- Anti-HIV Agents pharmacology, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes virology, Cells, Cultured, Enzyme Inhibitors pharmacology, HIV Core Protein p24 analysis, HIV Long Terminal Repeat, HIV-1 immunology, HIV-1 isolation & purification, Histone Deacetylases metabolism, Humans, Imidazoles pharmacology, Pyrroles pharmacology, RNA, Viral analysis, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes drug effects, HIV Infections virology, HIV-1 drug effects, Nylons pharmacology, Virus Latency drug effects
- Abstract
Background: The persistence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) type 1 within resting CD4+ T cells poses a daunting therapeutic challenge. Histone deacetylase (HDAC)-1, a chromatin-remodeling enzyme that can mediate gene silencing, is recruited to the HIV-1 long terminal repeat by the host transcription factor LSF. Pyrrole-imidazole polyamides, small molecules that target specific DNA sequences, can access the nucleus of cells and specifically block transcription-factor binding., Methods: We used polyamides to directly test the role of chromatin remodeling in HIV quiescence in primary resting CD4+ T cells obtained from HIV-infected patients., Results: After exposure to any of 4 different polyamides that specifically block HDAC-1 recruitment by LSF to the HIV promoter, replication-competent HIV was recovered from cultures of resting CD4+ T cells in 6 of 8 HIV-infected patients whose viremia had been suppressed by therapy. In comparison, HIV was not recovered after exposure to control, mismatched polyamides but was recovered from 7 of 8 of these patients' samples after the activation of T cells., Conclusions: We identify histone deacetylation as a mechanism that can dampen viral expression in infected, activated CD4+ T cells and establish a persistent, quiescent reservoir of HIV infection., (Copyright 2004 Infectious Diseases Society of America)
- Published
- 2004
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