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Analysis and dissociation of anti-HIV effects of shRNA to CCR5 and the fusion inhibitor C46

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 07:07 authored by Scott Ledger, Annett Howe, Stuart Turville, Anupriya Aggarwal, Borislav Savkovic, Andrew Ong, Orit Wolstein, Maureen Boyd, Michelle Millington, Paul Gorry, John Murray, Geoff Symonds
Background: The gene therapeutic Cal-1 comprises the anti-HIV agents: (i) sh5, a short hairpin RNA to CCR5 that down-regulates CCR5 expression and (ii) maC46 (C46), a peptide that inhibits viral fusion with the cell membrane. These constructs were assessed for inhibition of viral replication and selective cell expansion in a number of settings. Methods: HIV replication, selective outgrowth and cell surface viral binding were analysed with a single cycle infection assay of six pseudotyped HIV strains and a static and longitudinal passaging of MOLT4/CCR5 cells with HIV. Pronase digestion of surface virus and fluorescence microscopy assessed interactions between HIV virions and transduced cells. Results: Cal-1 reduced CCR5 expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells to CCR5?32 heterozygote levels. Even low level transduction resulted in significant preferential expansion in MOLT4/CCR5 gene-containing cells over a 3-week HIV challenge regardless of viral suppression [12.5% to 47.0% (C46), 46.7% (sh5), 62.2% (Dual), respectively]. The sh5 and Dual constructs at > 95% transduction also significantly suppressed virus to day 12 in the passage assay and all constructs, at varying percentage transduction inhibited virus in static culture. No escape mutations were present through 9 weeks of challenge. The Dual construct significantly suppressed infection by a panel of CCR5-using viruses, with its efficacy being independently determined from the single constructs. Dual and sh5 inhibited virion internalisation, as determined via pronase digestion of surface bound virus, by 70% compared to 13% for C46. Conclusions: The use of two anti-HIV genes allows optimal preferential survival and inhibition of HIV replication, with the impact on viral load being dependent on the percentage of gene marked cells. Copyright © 2018 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Funding

Innovative mathematical modelling to determine incorporation of gene therapy in different cell lineages; Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) as a model setting

Australian Research Council

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Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1002/jgm.3006
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 1099498X

Journal

Journal of Gene Medicine

Volume

20

Number

e3006

Issue

2-3

Start page

1

End page

14

Total pages

14

Publisher

John Wiley and Sons

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

Copyright © 2018 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Former Identifier

2006084830

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2019-03-26

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