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1.
J Virol ; 96(13): e0057722, 2022 07 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35730977

ABSTRACT

Despite effective antiretroviral therapy, HIV-1 persistence in latent reservoirs remains a major obstacle to a cure. We postulate that HIV-1 silencing factors suppress HIV-1 reactivation and that inhibition of these factors will increase HIV-1 reactivation. To identify HIV-1 silencing factors, we conducted a genome-wide CRISPR inhibition (CRISPRi) screen using four CRISPRi-ready, HIV-1-d6-GFP-infected Jurkat T cell clones with distinct integration sites. We sorted cells with increased green fluorescent protein (GFP) expression and captured single guide RNAs (sgRNAs) via targeted deep sequencing. We identified 18 HIV-1 silencing factors that were significantly enriched in HIV-1-d6-GFPhigh cells. Among them, SLTM (scaffold attachment factor B-like transcription modulator) is an epigenetic and transcriptional modulator having both DNA and RNA binding capacities not previously known to affect HIV-1 transcription. Knocking down SLTM by CRISPRi significantly increased HIV-1-d6-GFP expression (by 1.9- to 4.2-fold) in three HIV-1-d6-GFP-Jurkat T cell clones. Furthermore, SLTM knockdown increased the chromatin accessibility of HIV-1 and the gene in which HIV-1 is integrated but not the housekeeping gene POLR2A. To test whether SLTM inhibition can reactivate HIV-1 and further induce cell death of HIV-1-infected cells ex vivo, we established a small interfering RNA (siRNA) knockdown method that reduced SLTM expression in CD4+ T cells from 10 antiretroviral therapy (ART)-treated, virally suppressed, HIV-1-infected individuals ex vivo. Using limiting dilution culture, we found that SLTM knockdown significantly reduced the frequency of HIV-1-infected cells harboring inducible HIV-1 by 62.2% (0.56/106 versus 1.48/106 CD4+ T cells [P = 0.029]). Overall, our study indicates that SLTM inhibition reactivates HIV-1 in vitro and induces cell death of HIV-1-infected cells ex vivo. Our study identified SLTM as a novel therapeutic target. IMPORTANCE HIV-1-infected cells, which can survive drug treatment and immune cell killing, prevent an HIV-1 cure. Immune recognition of infected cells requires HIV-1 protein expression; however, HIV-1 protein expression is limited in infected cells after long-term therapy. The ways in which the HIV-1 provirus is blocked from producing protein are unknown. We identified a new host protein that regulates HIV-1 gene expression. We also provided a new method of studying HIV-1-host factor interactions in cells from infected individuals. These improvements may enable future strategies to reactivate HIV-1 in infected individuals so that infected cells can be killed by immune cells, drug treatment, or the virus itself.


Subject(s)
HIV Infections , HIV Seropositivity , HIV-1 , Virus Activation , Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active , CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes , Chromatin/genetics , Chromatin/metabolism , Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats/genetics , Gene Knockdown Techniques , HIV Infections/physiopathology , HIV Seropositivity/genetics , HIV-1/physiology , Humans , Jurkat Cells , Matrix Attachment Region Binding Proteins/antagonists & inhibitors , Matrix Attachment Region Binding Proteins/metabolism , Virus Activation/genetics
2.
Viruses ; 13(9)2021 09 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34578439

ABSTRACT

More than 50% of the HIV-1 latent reservoir is maintained by clonal expansion. The clonally expanded HIV-1-infected cells can contribute to persistent nonsuppressible low-level viremia and viral rebound. HIV-1 integration site and proviral genome landscape profiling reveals the clonal expansion dynamics of HIV-1-infected cells. In individuals under long-term suppressive antiretroviral therapy (ART), HIV-1 integration sites are enriched in specific locations in certain cancer-related genes in the same orientation as the host transcription unit. Single-cell transcriptome analysis revealed that HIV-1 drives aberrant cancer-related gene expression through HIV-1-to-host RNA splicing. Furthermore, the HIV-1 promoter dominates over the host gene promoter and drives high levels of cancer-related gene expression. When HIV-1 integrates into cancer-related genes and causes gain of function of oncogenes or loss of function of tumor suppressor genes, HIV-1 insertional mutagenesis drives the proliferation of HIV-1-infected cells and may cause cancer in rare cases. HIV-1-driven aberrant cancer-related gene expression at the integration site can be suppressed by CRISPR-mediated inhibition of the HIV-1 promoter or by HIV-1 suppressing agents. Given that ART does not suppress HIV-1 promoter activity, therapeutic agents that suppress HIV-1 transcription and halt the clonal expansion of HIV-1-infected cells should be explored to block the clonal expansion of the HIV-1 latent reservoir.


Subject(s)
HIV Infections/virology , HIV-1/physiology , Virus Integration , Virus Latency , Animals , Anti-HIV Agents/therapeutic use , Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active , Cell Proliferation , Disease Models, Animal , Genes, Tumor Suppressor , Genome, Viral , HIV Infections/drug therapy , HIV-1/genetics , Humans , Mutagenesis, Insertional , Oncogenes , Proviruses/genetics , Transcription, Genetic , Viremia
4.
J Virol ; 95(4)2021 02 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33239456

ABSTRACT

HIV transcription requires assembly of cellular transcription factors at the HIV-1promoter. The TFIIH general transcription factor facilitates transcription initiation by opening the DNA strands around the transcription start site and phosphorylating the C-terminal domain for RNA polymerase II (RNAPII) for activation. Spironolactone (SP), an FDA approved aldosterone antagonist, triggers the proteasomal degradation of the XPB subunit of TFIIH, and concurrently suppresses acute HIV infection in vitro Here we investigated SP as a possible block-and-lock agent for a functional cure aimed at the transcriptional silencing of the viral reservoir. The long-term activity of SP was investigated in primary and cell line models of HIV-1 latency and reactivation. We show that SP rapidly inhibits HIV-1 transcription by reducing RNAPII recruitment to the HIV-1 genome. shRNA knockdown of XPB confirmed XPB degradation as the mechanism of action. Unfortunately, long-term pre-treatment with SP does not result in epigenetic suppression of HIV upon SP treatment interruption, since virus rapidly rebounds when XPB reemerges; however, SP alone without ART maintains the transcriptional suppression. Importantly, SP inhibits HIV reactivation from latency in both cell line models and resting CD4+T cells isolated from aviremic infected individuals upon cell stimulation with latency reversing agents. Furthermore, long-term treatment with concentrations of SP that potently degrade XPB does not lead to global dysregulation of cellular mRNA expression. Overall, these results suggest that XPB plays a key role in HIV transcriptional regulation and XPB degradation by SP strengthens the potential of HIV transcriptional inhibitors in block-and-lock HIV cure approaches.IMPORTANCE Antiretroviral therapy (ART) effectively reduces an individual's HIV loads to below the detection limit, nevertheless rapid viral rebound immediately ensues upon treatment interruption. Furthermore, virally suppressed individuals experience chronic immune activation from ongoing low-level virus expression. Thus, the importance of identifying novel therapeutics to explore in block-and-lock HIV functional cure approaches, aimed at the transcriptional and epigenetic silencing of the viral reservoir to block reactivation from latency. We investigated the potential of repurposing the FDA-approved spironolactone (SP), as one such drug. SP treatment rapidly degrades a host transcription factor subunit, XPB, inhibiting HIV transcription and blocking reactivation from latency. Long-term SP treatment does not affect cellular viability, cell cycle progression or global cellular transcription. SP alone blocks HIV transcription in the absence of ART but does not delay rebound upon drug removal as XPB rapidly reemerges. This study highlights XPB as a novel drug target in block-and-lock therapeutic approaches.

5.
J Clin Invest ; 130(9): 4969-4984, 2020 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32573496

ABSTRACT

Despite effective antiretroviral therapy, HIV-1-infected cells continue to produce viral antigens and induce chronic immune exhaustion. We propose to identify HIV-1-suppressing agents that can inhibit HIV-1 reactivation and reduce HIV-1-induced immune activation. Using a newly developed dual-reporter system and a high-throughput drug screen, we identified FDA-approved drugs that can suppress HIV-1 reactivation in both cell line models and CD4+ T cells from virally suppressed HIV-1-infected individuals. We identified 11 cellular pathways required for HIV-1 reactivation as druggable targets. Using differential expression analysis, gene set enrichment analysis, and exon-intron landscape analysis, we examined the impact of drug treatment on the cellular environment at a genome-wide level. We identified what we believe to be a new function of a JAK inhibitor, filgotinib, that suppresses HIV-1 splicing. First, filgotinib preferentially suppresses spliced HIV-1 RNA transcription. Second, filgotinib suppresses HIV-1-driven aberrant cancer-related gene expression at the integration site. Third, we found that filgotinib suppresses HIV-1 transcription by inhibiting T cell activation and by modulating RNA splicing. Finally, we found that filgotinib treatment reduces the proliferation of HIV-1-infected cells. Overall, the combination of a drug screen and transcriptome analysis provides systematic understanding of cellular targets required for HIV-1 reactivation and drug candidates that may reduce HIV-1-related immune activation.


Subject(s)
CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes/immunology , HIV Infections/drug therapy , HIV-1/immunology , Lymphocyte Activation/drug effects , Pyridines/pharmacology , RNA Splicing/drug effects , Transcription, Genetic/drug effects , Triazoles/pharmacology , CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes/pathology , HIV Infections/immunology , HIV Infections/pathology , Humans , Jurkat Cells , RNA Splicing/immunology , Transcription, Genetic/immunology
6.
Sci Transl Med ; 12(543)2020 05 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32404504

ABSTRACT

Understanding HIV-1-host interactions can identify the cellular environment supporting HIV-1 reactivation and mechanisms of clonal expansion. We developed HIV-1 SortSeq to isolate rare HIV-1-infected cells from virally suppressed, HIV-1-infected individuals upon early latency reversal. Single-cell transcriptome analysis of HIV-1 SortSeq+ cells revealed enrichment of nonsense-mediated RNA decay and viral transcription pathways. HIV-1 SortSeq+ cells up-regulated cellular factors that can support HIV-1 transcription (IMPDH1 and JAK1) or promote cellular survival (IL2 and IKBKB). HIV-1-host RNA landscape analysis at the integration site revealed that HIV-1 drives high aberrant host gene transcription downstream, but not upstream, of the integration site through HIV-1-to-host aberrant splicing, in which HIV-1 RNA splices into the host RNA and aberrantly drives host RNA transcription. HIV-1-induced aberrant transcription was driven by the HIV-1 promoter as shown by CRISPR-dCas9-mediated HIV-1-specific activation and could be suppressed by CRISPR-dCas9-mediated inhibition of HIV-1 5' long terminal repeat. Overall, we identified cellular factors supporting HIV-1 reactivation and HIV-1-driven aberrant host gene transcription as potential therapeutic targets to disrupt HIV-1 persistence.


Subject(s)
HIV Infections , HIV-1 , Gene Expression Regulation, Viral , HIV Infections/drug therapy , HIV Infections/genetics , HIV-1/genetics , Humans , Transcription, Genetic , Virus Activation , Virus Latency
7.
Exp Cell Res ; 358(2): 199-208, 2017 09 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28663059

ABSTRACT

Although Insulin-like growth factor (IGF-I) has been intensively studied, the functions of E-domain peptides of pro-IGF-I, however, have been overlooked. In our laboratory, several anti-cancer activities of the E-peptide of pro-IGF-I have been identified for the longest isoforms of human and rainbow trout E-peptides. These activities include dose-dependent inhibition of colony formation, inhibition of cancer cell metastasis and invasion through matrigel, suppression of cancer-induced angiogenesis, and attenuation of expression of apoptotic genes in favor of cell death. In this study, we were able to produce two-tagged recombinant human Eb-peptide (hEb) of pro-IGF-I with a purity over 99%. With its antimicrobial peptide (AMP)-like characteristics such as binding to the cytoplasmic membrane, and the affinity to the substratum of culture plate, hEb forms a layer of interface rapidly which facilitates the attachment of breast carcinoma cells, MDA-MB-231. Furthermore, the likely conformational change of homo-dimerized hEb through a single disulfide bond, as well as the ability to trigger clathrin-mediated endocytosis may play important roles for inducing lamellipodia outspread in MDA-MB-231 cells. With the highly purified hEb-peptide, not only could we study its function(s) in detail but also the minimum requirement for cancerous cells to metastasize to a suitable environment and grow.


Subject(s)
Breast Neoplasms/metabolism , Cell-Matrix Junctions/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic/genetics , Insulin-Like Growth Factor I/metabolism , Protein Precursors/metabolism , Cell Adhesion , Cell Division/physiology , Cell Line, Tumor , Female , Humans , Insulin-Like Growth Factor II , Peptide Fragments , Pseudopodia/metabolism , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism
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