Newlands Press, Future Medicinal Chemistry, 4(8), p. 421-442, 2016
DOI: 10.4155/fmc.16.3
Full text: Unavailable
The current anti-HIV combination therapy does not eradicate the virus that persists mainly in quiescent infected CD4+ T cells as a latent integrated provirus that resumes after therapy interruption. The Tat-mediated transactivation (TMT) is a critical step in the HIV replication cycle that could give the opportunity to reduce the size of latent reservoirs. More than two decades of research led to the identification of various TMT inhibitors. While none of them met the criteria to reach the market, the search for a suitable TMT inhibitor is still actively pursued. Really promising compounds, including one in a Phase III clinical trial, have been recently identified, thus warranting an update.