巨噬细胞核苷酸池对HIV-1逆转录、病毒复制和新型抗病毒药物开发的影响

Molecular biology international Pub Date : 2012-01-01 Epub Date: 2012-07-01 DOI:10.1155/2012/625983
Christina Gavegnano, Edward M Kennedy, Baek Kim, Raymond F Schinazi
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引用次数: 42

摘要

巨噬细胞无处不在,是HIV-1的重要病毒储存库。巨噬细胞是一种非分裂、终末分化的细胞,相对于活跃分裂的T淋巴细胞具有独特的细胞微环境,所有这些都可以影响HIV-1感染/复制、针对这些细胞中病毒复制的抑制剂的设计、HIV-1基因组突变的出现和疾病进展。在巨噬细胞中,缺乏dntp驱动rNTP结合到前病毒DNA中,而不是淋巴细胞。此外,一种基于核糖的抑制剂能有效抑制巨噬细胞中HIV-1的复制,这促使人们重新考虑之前公认的2'-脱氧基抑制剂能有效抑制HIV-1复制的观点。此外,巨噬细胞中较高水平的dUTP和rNTP掺入,以及相对于淋巴细胞缺乏修复机制,为开发靶向抑制巨噬细胞中病毒复制提供了进一步的机制理解。总之,巨噬细胞内dNTPs和rNTPs的浓度构成了一个独特的细胞环境,直接影响巨噬细胞中HIV-1的复制,并为新的治疗机制提供了独特的见解,可以利用这些机制从这些细胞中消除病毒。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

The Impact of Macrophage Nucleotide Pools on HIV-1 Reverse Transcription, Viral Replication, and the Development of Novel Antiviral Agents.

The Impact of Macrophage Nucleotide Pools on HIV-1 Reverse Transcription, Viral Replication, and the Development of Novel Antiviral Agents.

The Impact of Macrophage Nucleotide Pools on HIV-1 Reverse Transcription, Viral Replication, and the Development of Novel Antiviral Agents.

Macrophages are ubiquitous and represent a significant viral reservoir for HIV-1. Macrophages are nondividing, terminally differentiated cells, which have a unique cellular microenvironment relative to actively dividing T lymphocytes, all of which can impact HIV-1 infection/replication, design of inhibitors targeting viral replication in these cells, emergence of mutations within the HIV-1 genome, and disease progression. Scarce dNTPs drive rNTP incorporation into the proviral DNA in macrophages but not lymphocytes. Furthermore, the efficacy of a ribose-based inhibitor that potently inhibits HIV-1 replication in macrophages, has prompted a reconsideration of the previously accepted dogma that 2'-deoxy-based inhibitors demonstrate effective inhibition of HIV-1 replication. Additionally, higher levels of dUTP and rNTP incorporation in macrophages, and lack of repair mechanisms relative to lymphocytes, provide a further mechanistic understanding required to develop targeted inhibition of viral replication in macrophages. Together, the concentrations of dNTPs and rNTPs within macrophages comprise a distinctive cellular environment that directly impacts HIV-1 replication in macrophages and provides unique insight into novel therapeutic mechanisms that could be exploited to eliminate virus from these cells.

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