4.6 Article

The Combination of Venetoclax and Ixazomib Selectively and Efficiently Kills HIV-Infected Cell Lines but Has Unacceptable Toxicity in Primary Cell Models

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 95, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.00138-21.7

Keywords

HIV cure; HIV latency reversal; BCL2; venetoclax; proteasome inhibitor; ixazomib; human immunodeficiency virus; latency reversal; proteasome

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [AI110173, AI120698, AI145407]
  2. amfAR [109593-62- RGRL]
  3. Foundation for AIDS Research

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The combination treatment of venetoclax and ixazomib shows enhanced killing of latently HIV-infected cells and greater reduction in HIV replication in vitro, but results in unacceptable toxicity in primary cells. Further investigation is needed to find a clinically relevant latency reversal agent for combination therapy with venetoclax to reduce the HIV reservoir.
The antiapoptotic protein BCL2 inhibits death of HIV-infected cells. Previously, we showed that the BCL2 inhibitor venetoclax selectively kills acutely HIV-infected cells and reduces HIV DNA in latently infected CD4 T cells ex vivo after reactivation with anti-CD3/anti-CD28. However, there is a need to identify a combination therapy with venetoclax and a clinically relevant latency reversal agent. Ixazomib is an oral proteasome inhibitor which we have shown reactivates latent HIV and predisposes reactivated cells to cell death. Here, we determined that the combination of venetoclax and ixazomib kills more latently HIV-infected cells and leads to greater reduction in HIV replication than either treatment alone in vitro in a T cell model. However, combination treatment of ex vivo CD4 T cells from antiretroviral therapy (ART)-suppressed, HIV-positive participants resulted in unanticipated and unacceptable nonspecific toxicity in primary cells. Therefore, while we show proof of concept that multiple agents can enhance selective killing of HIV-infected cells, the combination of venetoclax and ixazomib has unacceptable toxicity in primary cells, and so further investigation is needed to identify a clinically relevant latency reversal agent to combine with venetoclax as a novel strategy to reduce the size of the HIV reservoir. IMPORTANCE A cure for HIV would require eliminating cells that contain the virus in a latent form from the body. Current antiretroviral medications are unable to rid the body of latently infected cells. Here, we show that a combination of investigational agents-ixazomib plus venetoclax-which reactivate latent virus and predispose infected cells to apoptosis may reduce latent virus in a T cell model, but at the expense of nonspecific toxicity in primary cells.

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