AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how certain host factors essential for HIV-1 replication might also influence the reactivation of latent HIV.
  • Using a CRISPR gene library, researchers found several key dependency factors involved in HIV latency reactivation, with Cyclin T1 (CCNT1) emerging as the most significant.
  • The knockout of CCNT1 markedly impedes HIV latency reactivation in CD4+ T cells without disturbing their overall activation process, suggesting that CCNT1 is specifically crucial for overcoming HIV latency.

Article Abstract

We sought to explore the hypothesis that host factors required for HIV-1 replication also play a role in latency reversal. Using a CRISPR gene library of putative HIV dependency factors, we performed a screen to identify genes required for latency reactivation. We identified several HIV-1 dependency factors that play a key role in HIV-1 latency reactivation including , , , , , and . Knockout of Cyclin T1 ( ), a component of the P-TEFb complex important for transcription elongation, was the top hit in the screen and had the largest effect on HIV latency reversal with a wide variety of latency reversal agents. Moreover, knockout prevents latency reactivation in a primary CD4+ T cell model of HIV latency without affecting activation of these cells. RNA sequencing data showed that CCNT1 regulates HIV-1 proviral genes to a larger extent than any other host gene and had no significant effects on RNA transcripts in primary T cells after activation. We conclude that CCNT1 function is redundant in T cells but is absolutely required for HIV latency reversal.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10402164PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.07.28.551016DOI Listing

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