Retinol Binding Protein 4 reactivates latent HIV-1 via the JAK/STAT5 and JNK pathways
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Reactivation of the latent viral reservoirs is crucial for a cure of HIV/AIDS. However, current latency reversing agents are inefficient and the endogenous factors that have the potential to reactivate HIV in vivo remain poorly understood. To identify natural activators of latent HIV-1, we screened a comprehensive peptide/protein library derived from human hemofiltrate, representing the entire blood peptidome, using J-Lat cell lines harboring transcriptionally silent HIV-1 GFP reporter viruses. Fractions potently reactivating HIV-1 from latency contained human Retinol Binding Protein 4 (RBP4), the carrier of retinol (vitamin A). We found that retinol-bound holo-RBP4 but not retinol-free apo-RBP4 strongly reactivates HIV-1 in a variety of latently infected T cell lines. Functional analysis revealed that this reactivation depends on the JAK/STAT5 and JNK pathways but does not require retinoic acid production. High levels of RBP4 were detected in plasma from both healthy individuals and people living with HIV-1. Physiological concentrations of RBP4 induced significant viral reactivation in latently infected cells from individuals on long-term antiretroviral therapy with undetectable viral loads. As a potent natural HIV-1 latency-reversing agent, RBP4 offers a novel approach to activating the latent reservoirs and bringing us closer to a cure.