A New Small-Molecule Compound, Q308, Silences Latent HIV-1 Provirus by Suppressing Tat- and FACT-Mediated Transcription

Eliminating the latent HIV reservoir remains a difficult problem for creating an HIV functional cure or achieving remission. The "block-and-lock" strategy aims to steadily suppress transcription of the viral reservoir and lock the HIV promoter in deep latency using latency-promoting agents...

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Veröffentlicht in:Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy 2021-11, Vol.65 (12), p.e0047021-e0047021
Hauptverfasser: Zhou, Chen-Liang, Huang, Yi-Fan, Li, Yi-Bin, Liang, Tai-Zhen, Zheng, Teng-Yi, Chen, Pei, Wu, Zi-Yao, Lai, Fang-Yuan, Liu, Shu-Wen, Xi, Bao-Min, Li, Lin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Eliminating the latent HIV reservoir remains a difficult problem for creating an HIV functional cure or achieving remission. The "block-and-lock" strategy aims to steadily suppress transcription of the viral reservoir and lock the HIV promoter in deep latency using latency-promoting agents (LPAs). However, to date, most of the investigated LPA candidates are not available for clinical trials, and some of them exhibit immune-related adverse reactions. The discovery and development of new, active, and safe LPA candidates for an HIV cure are necessary to eliminate residual HIV-1 viremia through the block-and-lock strategy. In this study, we demonstrated that a new small-molecule compound, Q308, silenced the HIV-1 provirus by inhibiting Tat-mediated gene transcription and selectively downregulating the expression levels of the facilitated chromatin transcription (FACT) complex. Strikingly, Q308 induced the preferential apoptosis in HIV-1 latently infected cells, indicating that Q308 may reduce the size of the viral reservoir and thus further prevent viral rebound. These findings highlight that Q308 is a novel and safe anti-HIV-1 inhibitor candidate for a functional cure.
ISSN:0066-4804
1098-6596
DOI:10.1128/AAC.00470-21