6 research outputs found
Proviral HIV-genome-wide and pol-gene specific Zinc Finger Nucleases: Usability for targeted HIV gene therapy
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Infection with HIV, which culminates in the establishment of a latent proviral reservoir, presents formidable challenges for ultimate cure. Building on the hypothesis that <it>ex-vivo </it>or even <it>in-vivo </it>abolition <it>or </it>disruption of HIV-gene/genome-action by target mutagenesis or excision can irreversibly abrogate HIV's innate fitness to replicate and survive, we previously identified the isoschizomeric bacteria restriction enzymes (REases) AcsI and ApoI as potent cleavers of the HIV-pol gene (11 and 9 times in HIV-1 and 2, respectively). However, both enzymes, along with others found to cleave across the entire HIV-1 genome, slice (SX) at palindromic sequences that are prevalent within the human genome and thereby pose the risk of host genome toxicity. A long-term goal in the field of R-M enzymatic therapeutics has thus been to generate synthetic restriction endonucleases with longer recognition sites limited in specificity to HIV. We aimed (i) to assemble and construct zinc finger <it>arrays </it>and <it>nucleases </it>(ZFN) with either proviral-HIV-pol gene or proviral-HIV-1 whole-genome specificity respectively, and (ii) to advance a model for pre-clinically testing lentiviral vectors (LV) that deliver and transduce either ZFN genotype.</p> <p>Methods and Results</p> <p><it>First, </it>we computationally generated the consensus sequences of (a) 114 dsDNA-binding zinc finger (Zif) <it>arrays </it>(ZFAs or Zif<sub>HIV-pol</sub>) and (b) two zinc-finger <it>nucleases </it>(ZFNs) which, unlike the AcsI and ApoI homeodomains, possess specificity to >18 base-pair sequences uniquely present within the HIV-pol gene (Zif<sub>HIV-pol</sub>F<sub>N</sub>). Another 15 ZFNs targeting >18 bp sequences within the complete HIV-1 proviral genome were constructed (Zif<sub>HIV-1</sub>F<sub>N</sub>). <it>Second, </it>a model for constructing lentiviral vectors (LVs) that deliver and transduce a diploid copy of either Zif<sub>HIV-pol</sub>F<sub>N </sub>or Zif<sub>HIV-1</sub>F<sub>N </sub>chimeric genes (termed <b>LV- 2xZif</b><sub><b>HIV-pol</b></sub><b>F</b><sub><b>N </b></sub>and <b>LV- 2xZif</b><sub><b>HIV-1</b></sub><b>F</b><sub><b>N, </b></sub>respectively) is proposed. <it>Third, </it>two preclinical models for controlled testing of the safety and efficacy of either of these LVs are described using active HIV-infected TZM-bl reporter cells (HeLa-derived JC53-BL cells) and latent HIV-infected cell lines.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p><b>LV-2xZif</b><sub><b>HIV-pol</b></sub><b>F</b><sub><b>N </b></sub>and <b>LV- 2xZif</b><sub><b>HIV-1</b></sub><b>F</b><sub><b>N </b></sub>may offer the <it>ex-vivo </it>or even <it>in-vivo </it>experimental opportunity to halt HIV replication functionally by directly abrogating HIV-pol-gene-action <it>or </it>disrupting/excising over 80% of the proviral HIV DNA from latently infected cells.</p
Inhibition of HIV-1 Integration in Ex Vivo-Infected CD4 T Cells from Elite Controllers ▿
Elite controllers spontaneously maintain undetectable levels of HIV-1 replication for reasons that remain unclear. Here, we show that in elite controllers, direct ex vivo infection of purified CD4 T cells without prior in vitro activation results in disproportionately low levels of integrated HIV-1 DNA relative to the quantity of reverse transcripts, while the levels of two-long terminal repeat (2-LTR) circles were excessively elevated relative to those of integrated HIV-1 DNA. This indicates that chromosomal HIV-1 integration is inhibited in ex vivo-infected CD4 T cells from elite controllers. This defect in HIV-1 integration was unrelated to p21, a host protein that can restrict early HIV-1 replication steps, and was not visible following infection of in vitro-activated CD4 T cells from elite controllers. These data contribute to increasing evidence that intrinsic inhibition of specific HIV-1 replication steps plays an important role in the ability of elite controllers to maintain undetectable viral loads