Lewis Catherine A, Margolis David M, Browne Edward P
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States of America.
University of North Carolina HIV Cure Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States of America.
PLoS Pathog. 2025 Sep 3;21(9):e1013073. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1013073. eCollection 2025 Sep.
Antiretroviral therapy (ART) has dramatically improved the clinical prognosis for people with HIV and prevents HIV transmission. However, ART does not cure HIV infection because of a persistent, latent viral reservoir in long-lived cells such as central memory CD4+ T (TCM) cells. Eliminating or preventing reservoir formation will require a better understanding of HIV-1 latency establishment. We and others have recently shown that host cell factors such as histone deacetylases (HDACs) are critical cellular factors that allow HIV-1 entry into latency. Whether HDACs interact with specific viral factors to regulate latency establishment, however, is unknown. To examine the role of individual HIV-1 accessory proteins, we constructed a panel of HIV-1 reporter strains, each expressing a single HIV-1 accessory protein, and examined them in a primary CD4+ T-cell latency model. Interestingly, we found that the HDAC inhibitor (HDACi) vorinostat potently enhances the effect of the HIV-1 protein Vpr in promoting HIV expression in infected cells, suggesting that Vpr possesses a cryptic transcription-promoting activity that is restricted by HDACs. This activity was dependent on a p300-binding domain of Vpr and inhibited by a selective p300 histone acetyltransferase inhibitor. Interestingly, Vpr expression also resulted in a significant increase in the proportion of infected cells with a central memory (TCM) phenotype. Furthermore, we observed that TCM cells were more resistant to Vpr-induced apoptosis/cell death than other CD4+ T-cell subtypes, indicating that Vpr expression during reservoir formation selects for latent proviruses in TCM cells. Overall, these findings suggest that Vpr plays an important role in shaping the latent reservoir and that HIV-1 latency results, in part, from an HDAC-mediated restriction of Vpr's transcription-promoting activity. Understanding how viral factors shape the latent reservoir and how host and viral factors interact during HIV-1 latency establishment in CD4+ T cells will aid in the development of new latency-targeting therapies.
抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)显著改善了HIV感染者的临床预后,并预防了HIV传播。然而,由于在诸如中枢记忆CD4 + T(TCM)细胞等长寿细胞中存在持续的潜伏病毒库,ART并不能治愈HIV感染。消除或预防病毒库的形成需要更好地了解HIV-1潜伏建立过程。我们和其他人最近表明,宿主细胞因子如组蛋白脱乙酰酶(HDACs)是使HIV-1进入潜伏状态的关键细胞因子。然而,HDACs是否与特定病毒因子相互作用以调节潜伏建立尚不清楚。为了研究单个HIV-1辅助蛋白的作用,我们构建了一组HIV-1报告菌株,每个菌株表达一种单一的HIV-1辅助蛋白,并在原代CD4 + T细胞潜伏模型中对其进行研究。有趣的是,我们发现HDAC抑制剂(HDACi)伏立诺他能有效增强HIV-1蛋白Vpr在促进感染细胞中HIV表达方面的作用,这表明Vpr具有一种受HDACs限制的隐秘转录促进活性。这种活性依赖于Vpr的p300结合结构域,并被选择性p300组蛋白乙酰转移酶抑制剂所抑制。有趣的是,Vpr的表达还导致具有中枢记忆(TCM)表型的感染细胞比例显著增加。此外,我们观察到TCM细胞比其他CD4 + T细胞亚型对Vpr诱导的凋亡/细胞死亡更具抗性,这表明在病毒库形成过程中Vpr的表达选择了TCM细胞中的潜伏前病毒。总体而言,这些发现表明Vpr在塑造潜伏病毒库中起重要作用,并且HIV-1潜伏部分是由HDAC介导的对Vpr转录促进活性的限制导致的。了解病毒因子如何塑造潜伏病毒库以及宿主和病毒因子在CD4 + T细胞中HIV-1潜伏建立过程中如何相互作用,将有助于开发新的针对潜伏的疗法。