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New latency-promoting agents for a block-and-lock functional cure strategy

Eline Pellaers, Alexe Denis, Zeger Debyser

2024Current Opinion in HIV and AIDS12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Currently, HIV-infected patients are treated with antiretroviral therapy. However, when the treatment is interrupted, viral rebound occurs from latently infected cells. Therefore, scientists aim to develop an HIV-1 cure which eradicates or permanently silences the latent reservoir. RECENT FINDINGS: Previously, scientists focused on the shock-and-kill cure strategy, which aims to eradicate the latent reservoir using latency-reactivating agents. Limited success shifts the interest towards the block-and-lock cure approach, which aims to achieve a functional cure by "blocking" HIV-1 transcription and "locking" the provirus in a deep latent state, resistant to treatment-interruption. In this strategy, latency promoting agents are used to induce transcriptional silencing and alter the epigenetics environment at the HIV promotor. SUMMARY: For the block-and-lock cure strategy to succeed more investigation into the transcriptional and epigenetic regulation of HIV-1 gene expression is necessary to design optimal latency-promoting agents. In this review, we will discuss the latency promoting agents that have been described in literature during the past 2 years (2022-2023).

Topics & Concepts

Latency (audio)ProvirusEpigeneticsVirus latencyMedicineHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)Gene silencingAntiretroviral therapyBlock (permutation group theory)BioinformaticsNeuroscienceImmunologyBiologyViral replicationVirusComputer scienceGeneViral loadGeneticsTelecommunicationsGeometryGenomeMathematicsVirus-based gene therapy researchHIV Research and TreatmentCAR-T cell therapy research
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