inhibition of hiv-1 gene expression by ciclopirox and deferiprone, drugs that prevent hypusination of eukaryotic initiation factor 5a
Abstract
Background
Eukaryotic translation initiation factor eIF5A has been implicated in HIV-1 replication. This protein contains the apparently unique amino acid hypusine that is formed by the post-translational modification of a lysine residue catalyzed by deoxyhypusine synthase and deoxyhypusine hydroxylase (DOHH). DOHH activity is inhibited by two clinically used drugs, the topical fungicide ciclopirox and the systemic medicinal iron chelator deferiprone. Deferiprone has been reported to inhibit HIV-1 replication in tissue culture.
Results
Ciclopirox and deferiprone blocked HIV-1 replication in PBMCs. To examine the underlying mechanisms, we investigated the action of the drugs on eIF5A modification and HIV-1 gene expression in model systems. At early times after drug exposure, both drugs inhibited substrate binding to DOHH and prevented the formation of mature eIF5A. Viral gene expression from HIV-1 molecular clones was suppressed at the RNA level independently of all viral genes. The inhibition was specific for the viral promoter and occurred at the level of HIV-1 transcription initiation. Partial knockdown of eIF5A-1 by siRNA led to inhibition of HIV-1 gene expression that was non-additive with drug action. These data support the importance of eIF5A and hypusine formation in HIV-1 gene expression.
Conclusion
At clinically relevant concentrations, two widely used drugs blocked HIV-1 replication
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deepti2009retrovirologyinhibition
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Authors | ;Saxena Deepti;Palumbo Paul;Hanauske-Abel Hartmut M;Hoque Mainul;D'Alliessi Gandolfi Darlene;Park Myung;Pe'ery Tsafi;Mathews Michael B |
Journal | journal of portfolio management |
Year | 2009 |
DOI | 10.1186/1742-4690-6-90 |
URL | |
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