The natural stilbenoid (-)-hopeaphenol inhibits HIV transcription by targeting both PKC and NF-kB signaling and cyclin-dependent kinase 9

Ian Tietjen, Cole Schonhofer, Amanda Sciorillo, Maya E. Naidu, Zahra Haq, Toshitha Kannan, Andrew V. Kossenkov, Jocelyn Rivera-Ortiz, Karam Mounzer, Colin Hart, Kwasi Gyampoh, Zhe Yuan, Karren D. Beattie, Topul Rali, Kristy Shuda McGuire, Rohan A. Davis, Luis J. Montaner

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Despite effective combination antiretroviral therapy (cART), people living with HIV (PLWH) continue to harbor replication-competent and transcriptionally active virus in infected cells, which in turn can lead to ongoing viral antigen production, chronic inflammation, and increased risk of age-related comorbidities. To identify new agents that may inhibit postintegration HIV beyond cART, we screened a library of 512 pure compounds derived from natural products and identified (-)-hopeaphenol as an inhibitor of HIV postintegration transcription at low to submicromolar concentrations without cytotoxicity. Using a combination of global RNA sequencing, plasmid-based reporter assays, and enzyme activity studies, we document that hopeaphenol inhibits protein kinase C (PKC)- and downstream NF-kB-dependent HIV transcription as well as a subset of PKC-dependent T-cell activation markers, including interleukin-2 (IL-2) cytokine and CD25 and HLA-DRB1 RNA production. In contrast, it does not substantially inhibit the early PKC-mediated T-cell activation marker CD69 production of IL-6 or NF-kB signaling induced by tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-a). We further show that hopeaphenol can inhibit cyclin-dependent kinase 9 (CDK9) enzymatic activity required for HIV transcription. Finally, it inhibits HIV replication in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) infected in vitro and dampens viral reactivation in CD41 cells from PLWH. Our study identifies hopeaphenol as a novel inhibitor that targets a subset of PKC-mediated T-cell activation pathways in addition to CDK9 to block HIV expression. Hopeaphenol-based therapies could complement current antiretroviral therapy otherwise not targeting cell-associated HIV RNA and residual antigen production in PLWH.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages17
JournalAntimicrobial Agents Chemotherapy
Volume67
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2023
Externally publishedYes

Open Access - Access Right Statement


Keywords

  • antiviral pharmacology
  • cyclin kinase inhibitors
  • human immunodeficiency virus
  • natural antimicrobial products
  • transcriptional regulation
  • viral latency
  • viral pathogenesis

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