PLoS Pathogens (Sep 2017)

In vivo activation of latent HIV with a synthetic bryostatin analog effects both latent cell "kick" and "kill" in strategy for virus eradication.

  • Matthew D Marsden,
  • Brian A Loy,
  • Xiaomeng Wu,
  • Christina M Ramirez,
  • Adam J Schrier,
  • Danielle Murray,
  • Akira Shimizu,
  • Steven M Ryckbosch,
  • Katherine E Near,
  • Tae-Wook Chun,
  • Paul A Wender,
  • Jerome A Zack

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1006575
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 9
p. e1006575

Abstract

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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.