HIV latency reversal agents: A potential path for functional cure?
Loading...
Files
External sources
External sources
Date
Advisor
Coadvisor
Graduate program
Undergraduate course
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Type
Review
Access right
Files
External sources
External sources
Abstract
Despite the advances in Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) treatment, the cure for all HIV patients still poses a major challenge, which needs to be surpassed in the coming years. Among the strategies pursuing this aim, the ‘kick-and-kill’ approach, which involves the reactivation and elimination of a latent HIV reservoir that resides in some CD4+ T cells, appears promising. The first step of this approach requires the use of latency reversal agents (LRAs) that induce the reactivation of the latent virus. Although several classes of LRAs have been reported so far, some limitations of these compounds still need to be overcome before their clinical use. The complete exhaustion of the reservoir of latent virus will contribute to promote the second step of this approach, facilitating the elimination of the reactivated HIV. Therefore, potent, safe, and non-toxic LRAs are necessary to promote efficient elimination of the HIV-1 virus from its reservoir. In this review article, we focus on the promising LRAs that have been described in the literature over the past few years, highlighting the advantages and disadvantages of their use in the ‘kick and kill’ approach, thus opening a new avenue in the development of a potential cure.
Description
Keywords
Bromodomain inhibitors, Histone deacetylase inhibitors, HIV, Kick and kill approach, Latency reversal agents, Protein kinase C agonists
Language
English
Citation
European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, v. 213.




