Abstract
AbstractHIV cure strategies that aim to induce viral reactivation for immune clearance leverage latency reversal agents to modulate host pathways which directly or indirectly facilitate viral reactivation. Inhibition of BET (bromo and extra-terminal domain) family member BRD4 reverses HIV latency, but enthusiasm for the use of BET inhibitors in HIV cure studies is tempered by concerns over inhibition of other BET family members and dose-limiting toxicities in oncology trials. Here we evaluated the potential for bivalent chemical degraders targeted to the BET family as alternative latency reversal agents. We observed that despite highly potent and selective BRD4 degradation in primary CD4+ T-cells from ART-suppressed donors, BRD4 degraders failed to induce latency reversal as compared to BET inhibitors. Further, BRD4 degraders failed to mimic previously observed synergistic HIV reactivation between BET inhibitors and an activator of the non-canonical NF-κB pathway. Mechanistic investigation of this discrepancy revealed that latency reversal by BET inhibitors is not related to the abatement of competition between Tat and BRD4 for P-TEFb, but rather the ability of BRD4 to disrupt 7SK and increase the levels of free P-TEFb. This activity is dependent on the shift of BRD4 from chromatin-bound to soluble and retargeting of P-TEFb to chromatin which is dependent on intact BRD4 but independent of the bromodomains.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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