Approaches to combat AIDS and its causative agent, the human immunodeficiency virus HIV-1, have thus far proved ineffective. The proposed research program intends to investigate the nuclear import of two HIV-1 proteins which have central roles in HIV infection. We will apply our expertise in the area of the regulation of nuclear import of viral proteins, and build on our observations with respect to these proteins to attempt to establish the mechanistic basis of their nuclear import, and how thi ....Approaches to combat AIDS and its causative agent, the human immunodeficiency virus HIV-1, have thus far proved ineffective. The proposed research program intends to investigate the nuclear import of two HIV-1 proteins which have central roles in HIV infection. We will apply our expertise in the area of the regulation of nuclear import of viral proteins, and build on our observations with respect to these proteins to attempt to establish the mechanistic basis of their nuclear import, and how this differs from the conventional nuclear import pathways used by normal cellular proteins. We already have evidence that nuclear import of HIV-Tat is regulated in novel fashion by cellular factors, and intend, through determining its mechanistic basis, to be able to form the basis of a strategy to block this import pathway specifically, and thereby inhibit HIV replication. This may form the basis in the future of a new pharmaceutical approach to combat HIV-AIDS.Read moreRead less
Inhibition Of Nef-activated Src-family Kinases By CHK
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$514,307.00
Summary
HIV hijacks infected blood cells to produce its own proteins. Nef is one of these proteins and Nef alone is sufficient to cause an AIDS-like disease. Recently, we discovered that a protein called CHK can inhibit Nef. Our research will determine how CHK inhibits Nef and test the feasibility of drugs based on CHK. Such drugs would slow AIDS progression, assisting conventional therapies and patients' immune systems to combat the infection, leading to longer, healthier, more productive lives.