A targeted reactivation of latent HIV-1 using an activator vector in patient samples from acute infection

利用激活载体对急性感染患者样本中的潜伏性 HIV-1 进行靶向激活

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作者:Jamie F S Mann ,Joshua Pankrac ,Katja Klein ,Paul F McKay ,Deborah F L King ,Richard Gibson ,Chanuka N Wijewardhana ,Rahul Pawa ,Jodi Meyerowitz ,Yong Gao ,David H Canaday ,Mariano Avino ,Art F Y Poon ,Caroline Foster ,Sarah Fidler ,Robin J Shattock ,Eric J Arts

Abstract

Background: During combined anti-retroviral treatment, a latent HIV reservoir persists within resting memory CD4 T cells that initiates viral recrudescence upon treatment interruption. Strategies for HIV-1 cure have largely focused on latency reversing agents (LRAs) capable of reactivating and eliminating this viral reservoir. Previously investigated LRAs have largely failed to achieve a robust latency reversal sufficient for reduction of latent HIV pool or the potential of virus-free remission in the absence of treatment. Methods: We utilize a polyvalent virus-like particle (VLP) formulation called Activator Vector (ACT-VEC) to 'shock' provirus into transcriptional activity. Ex vivo co-culture experiments were used to evaluate the efficacy of ACT-VEC in relation to other LRAs in individuals diagnosed and treated during the acute stage of infection. IFN-γ ELISpot, qRT-PCR and Illumina MiSeq were used to evaluate antigenicity, latency reversal, and diversity of induced virus respectively. Findings: Using samples from HIV+ patients diagnosed and treated at acute/early infection, we demonstrate that ACT-VEC can reverse latency in HIV infected CD4 T cells to a greater extent than other major recall antigens as stimuli or even mitogens such as PMA/Iono. Furthermore, ACT-VEC activates more latent HIV-1 than clinically tested HDAC inhibitors or protein kinase C agonists. Interpretation: Taken together, these results show that ACT-VEC can induce HIV reactivation from latently infected CD4 T cells collected from participants on first line combined antiretroviral therapy for at least two years after being diagnosed and treated at acute/early stage of infection. These findings could provide guidance to possible targeted cure strategies and treatments. Funding: NIH and CIHR.

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