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Active RESEARCH AND INNOVATION UKRI Gateway to Research

Dynamic manipulation of NF-kappaB by HIV-1 in immune evasion and viral latency

£21.59M GBP

Funder Medical Research Council
Recipient Organization King's College London
Country United Kingdom
Start Date Mar 31, 2025
End Date Mar 31, 2030
Duration 1,826 days
Number of Grantees 2
Roles Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator
Data Source UKRI Gateway to Research
Grant ID MR/Z506606/1
Grant Description

Human Immunodeficiency Virus type 1 (HIV-1), the causative agent of the AIDS pandemic, encodes two accessory proteins (Vpr and Vpu) that potently suppress proinflammatory signalling via the NFkB family of transcription factors during the early and late phases of viral replication in CD4+ T cells and macrophages. This appears, at least in part, to be a mechanism to inhibit the induction of innate immune to viral replication at vulnerable stages of the lifecycle.

Despite this, the integrated HIV-1 provirus is an NFkB-regulated gene which requires NFkB to be activated to initiate viral gene expression. Our recent publications on Vpu and unpublished work on Vpr from clinical isolates shows that the potency of NFkB suppression by these proteins has been underestimated. Both exert their functions through markedly different mechanisms that are incompletely understood at the molecular and cellular level.

We have shown that Vpu promotes the degradation of the bTrCP1 adaptor of the SCF ubiquitin ligase, leading to a potent block of both classical and alternative NFkB pathways. But how this specificity is achieved is unclear. By contrast Vpr appears to block nuclear transit of inflammatory transcription factors by association with the nuclear pore and karyopherins.

However, the requirement for its cognate ubiquitin ligase Cullin4DCAF1 implies Vpr targets an unknown factor to exert this activity. Since Vpr is a constituent of the incoming viral particle and Vpu is expressed 'late', these data imply that HIV-1 dynamically regulates NFkB across its replication cycle to balance innate immune evasion and viral production.

A key barrier to curing individuals of HIV-1 is the presence of a pool of infected CD4+T cells harbouring transcriptionally silent integrated proviruses - the so-called latent reservoir. While individuals living with HIV-1 are take combined antiretroviral therapy (cART) this latent reservoir is of little consequence. However, upon therapy withdrawal re-activation of some of these reservoir cells leads to rapid re-emergence of the virus.

Therefore, aside from a handful of cases where HIV+ blood cancer patients were transplanted with bone marrow stem cells genetically resistant to infection, people living with HIV cannot be cured and must take cART for the rest of their lives. Thus, purging or silencing of this reservoir is viewed as the key goal of HIV-1 cure research, and ultimately this is dependent on the level of NFkB activation in individual latently infected cells.

However, a key gap in knowledge is what viral and cellular factors promote the establishment of latent proviruses in the first place and whether these activities limit the success and sustainability of latency-reversing agents (LRAs) currently being developed to facilitate reservoir reduction - so called 'shock and kill' strategies.

It is our hypothesis that dynamic manipulation of NFkB in HIV-1-infected primary cells by Vpr and Vpu tips the balance to promote the establishment of a latent provirus. Furthermore, their potency at inhibiting NFkB may limit the sustained gene expression required for sufficient reservoir purging by LRAs/cure strategies activating these pathways.

We therefore seek MRC programmatic support for interlinked basic and translational studies to understand:

1. The consequences of dynamic regulation of NFkB for both viral and host gene expression across the viral replication cycle 2. The molecular mechanisms underlying the suppression of NFkB by HIV-1 accessory proteins 3. How accessory protein function affects the establishment, maintenance, and sustainable reversion of HIV-1 latency.

All Grantees

King's College London

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