The effect of transcription factor YY1 and small molecules on HIV-1 expression

Current therapies to treat patients infected with HIV-1 do not represent a cure. The virus persists as a latent chromosomally integrated provirus in unstimulated helper T-cells that is unaffected by current drugs and can become reactivated upon stimulation of the T-cell receptor. Much research is cu...

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Main Author: Bernhard, Wendy
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2014
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/46610
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-466102018-01-05T17:27:22Z The effect of transcription factor YY1 and small molecules on HIV-1 expression Bernhard, Wendy Current therapies to treat patients infected with HIV-1 do not represent a cure. The virus persists as a latent chromosomally integrated provirus in unstimulated helper T-cells that is unaffected by current drugs and can become reactivated upon stimulation of the T-cell receptor. Much research is currently focused on understanding mechanisms that control HIV-1 latency and devising ways to eliminate latent viral populations. In this thesis, I characterize a protein, YY1 that is involved in establishing HIV-1 latency, examine the role of a histone methyltransferase inhibitor on activation of the HIV-1 LTR, and identify lariat peptides that recognize TFII-I to examine the role of an interaction between USF1 and TFII-I on HIV-1 transcription. The transcription factor YY1 has been shown to promote repressive chromatin modifications by the recruitment of histone deacetylases (HDACs). In this thesis, I identify a novel binding site for YY1 on the HIV-1 LTR, near the highly conserved RBEIII element immediately upstream of the enhancer, and show that YY1 dissociates from the LTR in vivo upon T-cell activation. Overexpression of YY1 causes an increase in HIV-1 expression, which illustrates the importance of this factor for establishment of latency. I also show that an inhibitor of the histone methlytransferase SUV39H1, chaetocin, causes induction of latent HIV-1 expression, with minimal cell toxicity and without T-cell activation. The effect of chaetocin is amplified synergistically in combination with histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors. These results indicate that drugs with properties similar to chaetocin may provide a therapy to purge cells of latent HIV-1, possibly in combination with other chromatin remodeling drugs. In a parallel objective, I sought to identify cyclic lariat peptide inhibitors of TFII-I, an additional factor shown to be involved in expression of HIV-1 transcription. In these studies, I identified a lariat peptide that binds the R4 domain of TFII-I using a yeast two-hybrid assay. Expression of this peptide in cells was found to activate the HIV-1 LTR 2-fold. This result demonstrates that lariat peptide inhibitors might offer an alternative to small molecule compounds as potential therapies targeting the latent reservoir. Medicine, Faculty of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Department of Graduate 2014-04-29T21:31:42Z 2014-04-29T21:31:42Z 2014 2014-09 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/46610 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 Canada http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ca/ University of British Columbia
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language English
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description Current therapies to treat patients infected with HIV-1 do not represent a cure. The virus persists as a latent chromosomally integrated provirus in unstimulated helper T-cells that is unaffected by current drugs and can become reactivated upon stimulation of the T-cell receptor. Much research is currently focused on understanding mechanisms that control HIV-1 latency and devising ways to eliminate latent viral populations. In this thesis, I characterize a protein, YY1 that is involved in establishing HIV-1 latency, examine the role of a histone methyltransferase inhibitor on activation of the HIV-1 LTR, and identify lariat peptides that recognize TFII-I to examine the role of an interaction between USF1 and TFII-I on HIV-1 transcription. The transcription factor YY1 has been shown to promote repressive chromatin modifications by the recruitment of histone deacetylases (HDACs). In this thesis, I identify a novel binding site for YY1 on the HIV-1 LTR, near the highly conserved RBEIII element immediately upstream of the enhancer, and show that YY1 dissociates from the LTR in vivo upon T-cell activation. Overexpression of YY1 causes an increase in HIV-1 expression, which illustrates the importance of this factor for establishment of latency. I also show that an inhibitor of the histone methlytransferase SUV39H1, chaetocin, causes induction of latent HIV-1 expression, with minimal cell toxicity and without T-cell activation. The effect of chaetocin is amplified synergistically in combination with histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors. These results indicate that drugs with properties similar to chaetocin may provide a therapy to purge cells of latent HIV-1, possibly in combination with other chromatin remodeling drugs. In a parallel objective, I sought to identify cyclic lariat peptide inhibitors of TFII-I, an additional factor shown to be involved in expression of HIV-1 transcription. In these studies, I identified a lariat peptide that binds the R4 domain of TFII-I using a yeast two-hybrid assay. Expression of this peptide in cells was found to activate the HIV-1 LTR 2-fold. This result demonstrates that lariat peptide inhibitors might offer an alternative to small molecule compounds as potential therapies targeting the latent reservoir. === Medicine, Faculty of === Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Department of === Graduate
author Bernhard, Wendy
spellingShingle Bernhard, Wendy
The effect of transcription factor YY1 and small molecules on HIV-1 expression
author_facet Bernhard, Wendy
author_sort Bernhard, Wendy
title The effect of transcription factor YY1 and small molecules on HIV-1 expression
title_short The effect of transcription factor YY1 and small molecules on HIV-1 expression
title_full The effect of transcription factor YY1 and small molecules on HIV-1 expression
title_fullStr The effect of transcription factor YY1 and small molecules on HIV-1 expression
title_full_unstemmed The effect of transcription factor YY1 and small molecules on HIV-1 expression
title_sort effect of transcription factor yy1 and small molecules on hiv-1 expression
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/46610
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