Preintegration HIV-1 inhibition by a combination lentiviral vector containing a chimeric TRIM5α protein, a CCR5 shRNA, and a TAR decoy

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Abstract

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) gene therapy offers a promising alternative approach to current antiretroviral treatments to inhibit HIV-1 infection. Various stages of the HIV life cycle including pre-entry, preintegration, and postintegration can be targeted by gene therapy to block viral infection and replication. By combining multiple highly potent anti-HIV transgenes in a single gene therapy vector, HIV-1 resistance can be achieved in transduced cells while prohibiting the generation of escape mutants. Here, we describe a combination lentiviral vector that encodes three highly effective anti-HIV genes functioning at separate stages of the viral life cycle including a CCR5 short hairpin RNA (shRNA) (pre-entry), a human/rhesus macaque chimeric TRIM5α (postentry/preintegration), and a transactivation response element (TAR) decoy (postintegration). The major focus on designing this anti-HIV vector was to block productive infection of HIV-1 and to inhibit any formation of provirus that would maintain the viral reservoir. Upon viral challenge, potent preintegration inhibition of HIV-1 infection was achieved in combination vector-transduced cells in both cultured and primary CD34 hematopoietic progenitor cell (HPC)-derived macrophages. The generation of escape mutants was also blocked as evaluated by long-term culture of challenged cells. The ability of this combination anti-HIV lentiviral vector to prevent HIV-1 infection, in vitro, warrants further evaluation of its in vivo efficacy. © The American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy.

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Anderson, J. S., Javien, J., Nolta, J. A., & Bauer, G. (2009). Preintegration HIV-1 inhibition by a combination lentiviral vector containing a chimeric TRIM5α protein, a CCR5 shRNA, and a TAR decoy. Molecular Therapy, 17(12), 2103–2114. https://doi.org/10.1038/mt.2009.187

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