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The enigma of the clandestine association between chloroquine and HIV-1 infection

Journal

HIV MEDICINE
Volume 16, Issue 10, Pages 585-590

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/hiv.12295

Keywords

chloroquine; endocytosis; HIV-1; immune activation; non-CD4 cells

Funding

  1. NIH [R01 NS0064]
  2. University of South Carolina School of Medicine [18060 K4900]

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Objectives The antimalarial drug chloroquine (CQ) dampens the immune system and is used in the treatment of autoimmune disorders. CQ also shows antiviral activity against nonenveloped and enveloped viruses, including HIV-1. Persistent immune activation in chronic HIV-1infection leads to CD4 T-cell depletion. CQ is envisioned to attenuate immune activation and virus activity in HIV-1-infected patients. The role of CQ in immune activation and virus activity is discussed here. Methods To elucidate the effect of CQ on immune activation, a retrospective review of published clinical trials, in vivo experimental studies in animals, and the most relevant in vitro observations in HIV-1-infected cells, together with observations from our own laboratory studies, was carried out and the findings discussed. Results In a few clinical studies and animal experiments, CQ was ineffective in decreasing immune activation and HIV-1 infection. In vitro, CQ markedly increased HIV-1 infection in astrocytes and other non-CD4 cells. Conclusions The use of CQ in HIV-1-infected patients is questionable. The evidence for a dampening of immune activation by CQ is inconclusive.

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