The tat inhibitor didehydro-cortistatin a prevents HIV-1 reactivation from latency

Guillaume Mousseau, Cari F. Kessing, Rémi Fromentin, Lydie Trautmann, Nicolas Chomont, Susana T. Valente

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

179 Scopus citations

Abstract

Antiretroviral therapy (ART) inhibits HIV-1 replication, but the virus persists in latently infected resting memory CD4+ T cells susceptible to viral reactivation. The virus-encoded early gene product Tat activates transcription of the viral genome and promotes exponential viral production. Here we show that the Tat inhibitor didehydro-cortistatin A (dCA), unlike other antiretrovirals, reduces residual levels of viral transcription in several models of HIV latency, breaks the Tat-mediated transcriptional feedback loop, and establishes a nearly permanent state of latency, which greatly diminishes the capacity for virus reactivation. Importantly, treatment with dCA induces inactivation of viral transcription even after its removal, suggesting that the HIV promoter is epigenetically repressed. Critically, dCA inhibits viral reactivation upon CD3/CD28 or prostratin stimulation of latently infected CD4_ T cells from HIV-infected subjects receiving suppressive ART. Our results suggest that inclusion of a Tat inhibitor in current ART regimens may contribute to a functional HIV-1 cure by reducing low-level viremia and preventing viral reactivation from latent reservoirs.IMPORTANCE Antiretroviral therapy (ART) reduces HIV-1 replication to very low levels, but the virus persists in latently infectedmemory CD4+ T cells, representing a long-lasting source of resurgent virus upon ART interruption. Based on the mode ofaction of didehydro-cortistatin A (dCA), a Tat-dependent transcription inhibitor, our work highlights an alternative approach to current HIV-1 eradication strategies to decrease the latent reservoir. In our model, dCA blocks the Tat feedback loop initiated after low-level basal reactivation, blocking transcriptional elongation and hence viral production from latently infected cells. Therefore, dCA combined with ART would be aimed at delaying or halting ongoing viral replication, reactivation, and replenishment of the latent viral reservoir. Thus, the latent pool of cells in an infected individual would be stabilized, and death of the long-lived infected memory T cells would result in a continuous decay of this pool over time, possibly culminating in the longawaited sterilizing cure.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbere00465-15
JournalmBio
Volume6
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 7 2015
Externally publishedYes

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Microbiology
  • Virology

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