GGrantIndex
← Search

The "Kick" Revisited in the "Kick and Kill" Strategy

$223,397R21FY2016AINIH

University Of Pittsburgh At Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh PA

Investigators

Linked publications, trials & patents

Abstract

? DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Although combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) can reduce plasma HIV RNA levels in most infected individuals to below the detection limit of clinical assays, it is not curative and persistent viremia is detected in the majority of patients.A rare, but extremely stable, HIV proviral DNA reservoir in resting CD4+ T cells (i.e. the latent reservoir) is thought to be the major source of persistent viremia. This latent reservoir can produce infectious virus when the host cell is reactivated by recall antigen (or by various cytokines), that can reseed HIV infection if cART is discontinued. Eradication of the latent reservoir may lead to a cure for HIV infection. Currently, a kick and kill strategy is being testd in ongoing clinical trials as a pharmacological approach to deplete the latent HIV reservoir. This strategy involves the administration of a latency reversing agent (LRA) which induces HIV out of latency (the kick), that in turn facilitates death of the infected cells by viral cytopathic effets (the kill). Several distinct therapeutic classes of LRAs have been identified that effectively kick HIV out of latency. In contrast, our understanding of the kill in HIV-infected resting CD4 T cells is extremely limited. The primary goal of this study is to comprehensively assess the kill in the kick and kill strategy, using novel primary cell models of latency in highly purified naïe (TN) and central memory (TCM) CD4+ T cells. Collectively, we anticipate that these studies will yield important insights into HIV persistence, and may have the potential to identify new targets or approaches to eradicate latent HIV infection. Furthermore, they could help explain clinical finding from ongoing trials that are focused on depleting the latent HIV reservoir.

View original record on NIH RePORTER →