New research on the structure of the human immunodeficiency virus
(HIV) has revealed a promising novel drug target for treating HIV
infection, which affects more than 1 million Americans and 40 million
people worldwide. The findings, published today in Science, show
that the virus’s genetic code can be read in two different ways by cells
the virus has infected. The result is that infected cells make two
different forms of the virus’s RNA.
“This functional diversity is essential for the virus to replicate in
the body. The virus has to have a proper balance between the two forms
of RNA,” says Joshua Brown, the lead author on the study. “For decades,
the scientific community has known that two different structural forms
of HIV RNA exist—they just didn’t know what controls that balance. We’ve
discovered that a single nucleotide is having a huge effect, which is a
paradigm shift in understanding how HIV works.”
Crucially, “You can imagine that if you could come up with a drug that would target the genetic code
at that one specific spot, and shift it to one form only, then it could
prevent further infection, theoretically,” says Brown, who earned his
Ph.D. from UMBC in 2018 and continues to conduct research there while
completing his M.D.
A new trajectory
“One of the things we’re working on now is testing different
molecules that could shift the equilibrium between the two forms, so
that it could potentially be used as a treatment for HIV,” says Issac
Chaudry, a junior at UMBC and an author on the paper.
This exciting work comes from a research group led by Michael
Summers, Robert E. Meyerhoff Chair for Excellence in Research and
Mentoring and Distinguished University Professor at UMBC. Summers has
been conducting groundbreaking research on HIV for decades. Typically,
the group’s focus is on basic science.
“Drug discovery isn’t the direction that the Summers lab usually
goes, but this was such an impactful finding in a very attractive area,
we took the initiative to start looking into it,” Brown says. “But we’re
still in the very early stages.”
More effective treatments for more patients
Thanks to significant research on HIV over the last few decades,
today AIDS is a manageable disease. Still, therapies can come with side
effects, medication regimens can be complex, and treatment options can
be limited for patients with other conditions, such as liver or kidney
problems.
Many therapies, even if they come in the form of a single pill,
contain several drugs targeting different parts of the virus’s
replication cycle. That’s necessary because the HIV genetic code, which
is made of RNA, mutates rapidly. This allows the virus to adapt and
become resistant to current HIV therapies. If a drug targets an area
that has mutated in a given patient, the drug may no longer work for
them. By using several drugs at once, it’s more likely that the regimen
will continue to work for longer.
But the area of the HIV RNA genome that this new research focuses on
is “highly conserved.” This means the rate of mutation is less than
other places in the genome, explains Ghazal Becker, a 2019 UMBC alumna
and an author on the paper. The result is “there’s more chance of a drug
that targets that region being effective for longer,” she says.
It might also mean that one drug would be enough, rather than
patients needing several drugs to get the job done. “If you’re targeting
a conserved region, you can potentially come up with a treatment plan
that uses only one drug,” says Aishwarya Iyer, a 2018 UMBC alumna,
current M.D./Ph.D. at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, and
an author on the paper. “It might have fewer side effects and could
offer more treatment options to people with different health
conditions.”
Expanding the research horizon
This new research opens up a range of opportunities for Brown’s
research group and others. “We’re very interested to see how other labs
will interpret our results, expand upon them, and possibly find other
applications for this type of RNA function,” Brown says.
Those future results and any new therapies they enable could have a
major impact. “Every time we get a new drug in HIV, we exponentially
improve the chances of individuals finding a drug that works for them,
where resistance is a little less likely,” says Hannah Carter, a 2017
UMBC alumna, current M.D./Ph.D. student at University of Michigan, and
an author on the paper. “Every time a new drug can get on the scene,
that’s a significant improvement for the lives of HIV patients.”
The research could have effects beyond HIV, too. “Some HIV research has laid the groundwork
in how we understand coronaviruses,” Carter adds. “All basic science in
HIV ends up having a ripple effect throughout all of virology.”
The ripple effect might go even farther. “The idea that a single
nucleotide difference is changing the structure and function of RNA that
is thousands of nucleotides long could open up a whole new aspect of
cell biology,” Chaudry says. “It could be possible that there are
mammalian genes that operate in a similar manner, and the entire
mechanism might be something that’s applicable to other human genes as
well. I think that whole paradigm could provide a new perspective for
RNA biology.”
More information: “Structural basis for transcriptional start site control of HIV-1 RNA fate” Science (2020). https://science.sciencemag.org … 1126/science.aaz7959
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-04-breakthrough-discovery-hiv-path-therapies.html
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