Brazilian Journal of Infectious Diseases (Mar 2020)

Nicotinamide activates latent HIV-1 ex vivo in ART suppressed individuals, revealing higher potency than the association of two methyltransferase inhibitors, chaetocin and BIX01294

  • Sadia Samer,
  • Muhammad Shoaib Arif,
  • Leila Bertoni Giron,
  • Jean Paulo Lopes Zukurov,
  • James Hunter,
  • Bruna Teresa Santillo,
  • Gislene Namiyama,
  • Juliana Galinskas,
  • Shirley Vasconcelos Komninakis,
  • Telma Miyuki Oshiro,
  • Maria Cecilia Sucupira,
  • Luiz Mario Janini,
  • Ricardo Sobhie Diaz

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 2
pp. 150 – 159

Abstract

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Background: Latent HIV-1 is a major hurdle in obtaining HIV-1 sustained virological remission (SVR). Here we explored histone deacetylation inhibition property of nicotinamide (NAM; n = 17) for the first time in comparison to a combination of methyltransferase inhibitors (MTIs; Chaetocin and BIX01294; n = 25) to reactivate latent HIV ex vivo in CD8-depleted PBMCs from antiretroviral treated aviremic individuals. Results: NAM reactivated HIV-1 from 13/17 (76.4%) samples compared to 20/25 (80.0%) using MTIs with mean viral load (VLs) of 4.32 and 3.22 log10 RNA copies/mL, respectively (p = 0.004). Mean purging time after NAM and MTIs stimulation was 5.1 and 6.75 days, respectively (p = 0.73). Viral purging in autologous cultures exhibited blunted HIV recovery with fluctuating VLs followed by a complete viral extinction when expanded in allogenic system. Electron microscopy from five supernatants revealed anomalous viral particles, with lack of complete viral genomes when characterized by ultradeep sequencing through metagenomics approach (n = 4). Conclusion: NAM alone was more potent HIV-1 activator than combination of MTIs, with potential of clinical use.

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