2019
DOI: 10.1007/s00018-019-03156-8
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Strategies to eradicate HIV from infected patients: elimination of latent provirus reservoirs

Abstract: 35 years since identification of HIV as the causative agent of AIDS, and 35 million deaths associated with this disease, significant effort is now directed towards the development of potential cures. Current anti-retroviral (ART) therapies for HIV/AIDS can suppress virus replication to undetectable levels, and infected individuals can live symptom free so long as treatment is maintained. However, removal of therapy allows rapid re-emergence of virus from a highly stable reservoir of latently infected cells tha… Show more

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Cited by 97 publications
(125 citation statements)
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References 163 publications
(181 reference statements)
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“…Of note, this strategy does not discriminate between replication-competent and defective proviruses. Several classes of LRAs have been developed and studied (reviewed in Kim et al, 2018;Spivak and Planelles, 2018;Sadowski and Hashemi, 2019). These include: PKC agonists, MAPK agonists, CCR5 antagonist, Tat vaccine, SMAC mimetics, inducers of P-TEFb release, activators of Akt pathway, benzotriazole derivatives, epigenetic modifiers (including HDACis, HMTis, and DNMTis), and immunomodulatory LRAs (including TLR agonists, IL-15 agonist and immune checkpoint inhibitors) (summarized in Table 1).…”
Section: Shock and Kill Strategy To Eliminate The Latent Reservoirmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Of note, this strategy does not discriminate between replication-competent and defective proviruses. Several classes of LRAs have been developed and studied (reviewed in Kim et al, 2018;Spivak and Planelles, 2018;Sadowski and Hashemi, 2019). These include: PKC agonists, MAPK agonists, CCR5 antagonist, Tat vaccine, SMAC mimetics, inducers of P-TEFb release, activators of Akt pathway, benzotriazole derivatives, epigenetic modifiers (including HDACis, HMTis, and DNMTis), and immunomodulatory LRAs (including TLR agonists, IL-15 agonist and immune checkpoint inhibitors) (summarized in Table 1).…”
Section: Shock and Kill Strategy To Eliminate The Latent Reservoirmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The ZFP-362 activator of HIV described here may prove useful in the development of a functional cure for HIV infection. For instance, the ZFP-362 activator could be used in a "shock-and-kill" strategy to activate latent virus while maintaining ART, leading to the death of the latently infected cells [2]. Alternatively, ZFP-362 could be used to induce sustained expression of HIV to allow for or enhance chimeric antigen T cell (CAR) targeting of infected cells.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Activation and purging of provirus from macrophages, monocytes, and T-cells, with ~ 1 infected cell per million cells, has been an ongoing experimental struggle, the goal being to nd latency reversing agents (LRAs) that can be used along with antiretroviral therapy (ART). This "shock-andkill" approach aims to eliminate the reservoir by inducing HIV-1 activation resulting in death of the infected cell [2]. Several LRAs are known to activate latent provirus in patients [3], but LRAs are broad effectors of cellular processes and, therefore, inherent off-target effects are expected.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In retroviruses and hepadnaviruses, the viral DNA is not only hidden from antiviral drugs, but it can serve as an archive of genomes whose replication can be reactivated upon treatment discontinuation. If combination therapy could be coupled with an efficient elimination of the proviral reservoirs in host DNA (De Crignis and Mahmoudi, 2014;Sadowski and Hashemi, 2019), HIV-1 could probably be eliminated from the infected organism, as achieved in the case of HCV infections in many patients treated with direct-acting antiviral agents (DAAs).…”
Section: Combination Treatmentsmentioning
confidence: 99%