Marsden Matthew D, Loy Brian A, Wu Xiaomeng, Ramirez Christina M, Schrier Adam J, Murray Danielle, Shimizu Akira, Ryckbosch Steven M, Near Katherine E, Chun Tae-Wook, Wender Paul A, Zack Jerome A
Department of Medicine, Division of Hematology and Oncology, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, United States of America.
Department of Chemistry and Department of Chemical and Systems Biology, Stanford University, Stanford, California, United States of America.
PLoS Pathog. 2017 Sep 21;13(9):e1006575. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1006575. eCollection 2017 Sep.
The ability of HIV to establish a long-lived latent infection within resting CD4+ T cells leads to persistence and episodic resupply of the virus in patients treated with antiretroviral therapy (ART), thereby preventing eradication of the disease. Protein kinase C (PKC) modulators such as bryostatin 1 can activate these latently infected cells, potentially leading to their elimination by virus-mediated cytopathic effects, the host's immune response and/or therapeutic strategies targeting cells actively expressing virus. While research in this area has focused heavily on naturally-occurring PKC modulators, their study has been hampered by their limited and variable availability, and equally significantly by sub-optimal activity and in vivo tolerability. Here we show that a designed, synthetically-accessible analog of bryostatin 1 is better-tolerated in vivo when compared with the naturally-occurring product and potently induces HIV expression from latency in humanized BLT mice, a proven and important model for studying HIV persistence and pathogenesis in vivo. Importantly, this induction of virus expression causes some of the newly HIV-expressing cells to die. Thus, designed, synthetically-accessible, tunable, and efficacious bryostatin analogs can mediate both a "kick" and "kill" response in latently-infected cells and exhibit improved tolerability, therefore showing unique promise as clinical adjuvants for HIV eradication.
人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)在静息CD4+ T细胞内建立长期潜伏感染的能力,导致接受抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)治疗的患者体内病毒持续存在并间歇性补充,从而阻碍疾病的根除。蛋白激酶C(PKC)调节剂,如苔藓抑素1,可激活这些潜伏感染的细胞,有可能通过病毒介导的细胞病变效应、宿主的免疫反应和/或针对积极表达病毒的细胞的治疗策略将其清除。虽然该领域的研究主要集中在天然存在的PKC调节剂上,但它们的研究受到其有限且可变的可用性的阻碍,同样严重的是其活性欠佳和体内耐受性问题。我们在此表明,与天然产物相比,一种设计的、可通过合成获得的苔藓抑素1类似物在体内耐受性更好,并且能在人源化BLT小鼠(一种用于研究HIV在体内持续存在和发病机制的经过验证的重要模型)中有效诱导潜伏状态的HIV表达。重要的是,这种病毒表达的诱导会导致一些新表达HIV的细胞死亡。因此,设计的、可通过合成获得的、可调节且有效的苔藓抑素类似物可在潜伏感染的细胞中介导“激活”和“杀伤”反应,并表现出更好的耐受性,因此作为根除HIV的临床佐剂显示出独特的前景。