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Effect of transcription peptide inhibitors on HIV-1 replication

Authors :
Rachel Van Duyne
Mohammed Saifuddin
Zak Klase
Fatah Kashanchi
Susana Mendez
Jessica C. Cardenas
Kylene Kehn-Hall
Rebecca Easley
Weilin Wu
Hao Chen
Chen Zeng
Source :
Virology. 376:308-322
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2008.

Abstract

HIV-1 manipulates cellular machineries such as cyclin dependent kinases (cdks) and their cyclin elements, to stimulate virus production and maintain latent infection. Specifically, the HIV-1 viral protein Tat increases viral transcription by binding to the TAR promoter element. This binding event is mediated by the phosphorylation of Pol II by complexes such as cdk9/Cyclin T and cdk2/Cyclin E. Recent studies have shown that a Tat 41/44 peptide derivative prevents the loading of cdk2 onto the HIV-1 promoter, inhibiting gene expression and replication. Here we show that Tat peptide analogs computationally designed to dock at the cyclin binding site of cdk2 have the ability to bind to cdk2 and inhibit the association of cdk2 with the HIV promoter. Specifically, the peptide LAALS dissociated the complex and decreased kinase activity in vitro . We also describe our novel small animal model which utilizes humanized Rag2 −/− γ c −/− mice. This small peptide inhibitor induces a decrease in HIV-1 viral transcription in vitro and minimizes viral loads in vivo .

Details

ISSN :
00426822
Volume :
376
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Virology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....42b6e3fa7d024c8291e5ad1053cd6063
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.virol.2008.02.036