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N-Acetylcysteine Inhibits Latent HIV Expression in Chronically Infected Cells

73

Citations

22

References

1991

Year

Abstract

The progression of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection from its early latent (asymptomatic) stage to active, late-stage acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) apparently begins with the production of inflammatory cytokines that stimulate the expression and replication of the latent virus. We have shown that N-acetylcysteine, a cysteine precursor that is converted intracellularly into glutathione, blocks cytokine-stimulated HIV replication in an acutely infected T-cell line and in acutely infected peripheral blood mononuclear cells from normal individuals. In this report, we show that N-acetylcysteine also inhibits stimulated HIV expression in chronically infected monocyte and T-cell lines which are used as models for latent infection in AIDS. Furthermore, we show that N-acetylcysteine blocks viral production in monocyte cell lines more effectively than it blocks viral production in T cells. Since monocytes are a major reservoir for HIV in infected individuals, these results suggest that N-acetylcysteine may slow the change from latency to the later stages of AIDS in HIV-infected individuals.

References

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