Viruses (Dec 2023)

Breaking the Silence: Regulation of HIV Transcription and Latency on the Road to a Cure

  • Natasha N. Duggan,
  • Tatjana Dragic,
  • Sumit K. Chanda,
  • Lars Pache

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/v15122435
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 12
p. 2435

Abstract

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Antiretroviral therapy (ART) has brought the HIV/AIDS epidemic under control, but a curative strategy for viral eradication is still needed. The cessation of ART results in rapid viral rebound from latently infected CD4+ T cells, showing that control of viral replication alone does not fully restore immune function, nor does it eradicate viral reservoirs. With a better understanding of factors and mechanisms that promote viral latency, current approaches are primarily focused on the permanent silencing of latently infected cells (“block and lock”) or reactivating HIV-1 gene expression in latently infected cells, in combination with immune restoration strategies to eliminate HIV infected cells from the host (“shock and kill”). In this review, we provide a summary of the current, most promising approaches for HIV-1 cure strategies, including an analysis of both latency-promoting agents (LPA) and latency-reversing agents (LRA) that have shown promise in vitro, ex vivo, and in human clinical trials to reduce the HIV-1 reservoir.

Keywords