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The p400 complex promotes HIV-1 latency by suppressing 1 viral transcription and altering the host cell state [ChIP-seq]

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NIAID Data Ecosystem2026-05-02 收录
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https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE280359
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Eradicating HIV-1 is complicated by latently infected CD4+T cells harboring repressed HIV-1 proviruses that can reactivate. Using a pooled shRNAmir screen of all human chromatin regulators we identified previously unappreciated factors that govern HIV-1 latency and reactivation. Depletion of EP400 and DMAP1, core subunits of the multifunctional p400 complex, strongly derepressed HIV-1 transcription in Jurkat and primary CD4+T cells. EP400/DMAP1 co-localize with paused RNA Polymerase II (RNAPII) at the transcriptional start sites (TSS) of protein-coding genes, limiting RNAPII pause release, with HIV-1 elongation particularly affected. TNF-⍺ stimulation robustly promotes co-recruitment of RNAPII, EP400, and DMAP1 across the HIV-1 genome, which is distinct from other genes where this co-recruitment occurs mainly at the TSS. Depletion of EP400/DMAP1 reactivated HIV transcription independently of histone variant exchange and KAT5 activity, and increased gene expression of key T cell factors known to trans-activate HIV-1. Thus, the p400 complex is a host restriction factor that blocks RNAPII transcriptional elongation at the HIV-1 locus and creates a CD4+T cell state unfavorable for HIV-1 transcription. J-Lat 10.6 cells were transduced with shRNAs targeting CD8B (negative control), EP400 or DMAP1. Following 2 days of puromycin selection and 7 days expansion of cells, cells were collected for native ChIP-seq.
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2025-09-03
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