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Dive into the research topics where Dimitrios N. Vatakis is active.

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Featured researches published by Dimitrios N. Vatakis.


Retrovirology | 2008

Viral complementation allows HIV-1 replication without integration

Huub C Gelderblom; Dimitrios N. Vatakis; Sean A. Burke; Steven D Lawrie; Gregory Bristol; David N. Levy

BackgroundThe integration of HIV-1 DNA into cellular chromatin is required for high levels of viral gene expression and for the production of new virions. However, the majority of HIV-1 DNA remains unintegrated and is generally considered a replicative dead-end. A limited amount of early gene expression from unintegrated DNA has been reported, but viral replication does not proceed further in cells which contain only unintegrated DNA. Multiple infection of cells is common, and cells that are productively infected with an integrated provirus frequently also contain unintegrated HIV-1 DNA. Here we examine the influence of an integrated provirus on unintegrated HIV-1 DNA (uDNA).ResultsWe employed reporter viruses and quantitative real time PCR to examine gene expression and virus replication during coinfection with integrating and non-integrating HIV-1. Most cells which contained only uDNA displayed no detected expression from fluorescent reporter genes inserted into early (Rev-independent) and late (Rev-dependent) locations in the HIV-1 genome. Coinfection with an integrated provirus resulted in a several fold increase in the number of cells displaying uDNA early gene expression and efficiently drove uDNA into late gene expression. We found that coinfection generates virions which package and deliver uDNA-derived genomes into cells; in this way uDNA completes its replication cycle by viral complementation. uDNA-derived genomes undergo recombination with the integrated provirus-derived genomes during second round infection.ConclusionThis novel mode of retroviral replication allows survival of viruses which would otherwise be lost because of a failure to integrate, amplifies the effective amount of cellular coinfection, increases the replicating HIV-1 gene pool, and enhances the opportunity for diversification through errors of polymerization and recombination.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Antitumor activity from antigen-specific CD8 T cells generated in vivo from genetically engineered human hematopoietic stem cells

Dimitrios N. Vatakis; Richard C. Koya; Christopher C. Nixon; Liu Wei; Sohn G. Kim; Patricia Avancena; Gregory Bristol; David Baltimore; Donald B. Kohn; Antoni Ribas; Caius G. Radu; Zoran Galic; Jerome A. Zack

The goal of cancer immunotherapy is the generation of an effective, stable, and self-renewing antitumor T-cell population. One such approach involves the use of high-affinity cancer-specific T-cell receptors in gene-therapy protocols. Here, we present the generation of functional tumor-specific human T cells in vivo from genetically modified human hematopoietic stem cells (hHSC) using a human/mouse chimera model. Transduced hHSC expressing an HLA-A*0201–restricted melanoma-specific T-cell receptor were introduced into humanized mice, resulting in the generation of a sizeable melanoma-specific naïve CD8+ T-cell population. Following tumor challenge, these transgenic CD8+ T cells, in the absence of additional manipulation, limited and cleared human melanoma tumors in vivo. Furthermore, the genetically enhanced T cells underwent proper thymic selection, because we did not observe any responses against non–HLA-matched tumors, and no killing of any kind occurred in the absence of a human thymus. Finally, the transduced hHSC established long-term bone marrow engraftment. These studies present a potential therapeutic approach and an important tool to understand better and to optimize the human immune response to melanoma and, potentially, to other types of cancer.


Journal of Virology | 2007

Immediate Activation Fails To Rescue Efficient Human Immunodeficiency Virus Replication in Quiescent CD4+ T Cells

Dimitrios N. Vatakis; Gregory Bristol; Thomas A. Wilkinson; Samson A. Chow; Jerome A. Zack

ABSTRACT Unlike activated T cells, quiescent CD4+ T cells have shown resistance to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection due to a block in the early events of the viral life cycle. To further investigate the nature of this block, we infected quiescent CD4+ T cells with HIV-1NL4-3 and immediately stimulated them. Compared to activated (prestimulated) cells, these poststimulated cells showed slightly decreased viral entry and delays in the completion of reverse transcription. However, the relative efficiency of integration was similar to that of prestimulated cells. Together, this resulted in decreased expression of tat/rev mRNA and synthesis of viral protein. Furthermore, based on cell cycle staining and BrdU incorporation, poststimulated cells expressing viral protein failed to initiate a second round of their cell cycle, independently of Vpr-mediated arrest. Together, these data demonstrate that the early stages of the HIV life cycle are inefficient in these poststimulated cells and that efficient replication cannot be induced by subsequent activation.


Journal of Virology | 2009

Human Immunodeficiency Virus Integration Efficiency and Site Selection in Quiescent CD4+ T Cells

Dimitrios N. Vatakis; Sanggu Kim; Namshin Kim; Samson A. Chow; Jerome A. Zack

ABSTRACT Until very recently, quiescent CD4+ T cells were thought to be resistant to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. Subsequent studies, attempting to fully elucidate the mechanisms of resistance, showed that quiescent cells could become infected by HIV at low efficiency and form a latently infected population. In this study, we set out to identify the sites of viral integration and to assess the efficiency of the overall integration process in quiescent cells. Based on our results, HIV integration in quiescent CD4+ T cells occurs in sites similar to those of their prestimulated counterparts. While site selections are similar, the integration process in quiescent cells is plagued by the formation of high levels of incorrectly processed viral ends and abortive two-long-terminal-repeat circles.


Molecular therapy. Nucleic acids | 2015

Engineering Cellular Resistance to HIV-1 Infection In Vivo Using a Dual Therapeutic Lentiviral Vector

Bryan P. Burke; Bernard Levin; Jane Zhang; Anna Sahakyan; Joshua Boyer; Maria V. Carroll; Joanna Camba Colón; Naomi Keech; Valerie Rezek; Gregory Bristol; Erica Eggers; Ruth Cortado; Maureen Boyd; Helen Impey; Saki Shimizu; Emily L. Lowe; Gene-Errol Ringpis; Sohn G. Kim; Dimitrios N. Vatakis; Louis Breton; Jeffrey S. Bartlett; Irvin S. Y. Chen; Scott G. Kitchen; Dong Sung An; Geoff Symonds

We described earlier a dual-combination anti-HIV type 1 (HIV-1) lentiviral vector (LVsh5/C46) that downregulates CCR5 expression of transduced cells via RNAi and inhibits HIV-1 fusion via cell surface expression of cell membrane-anchored C46 antiviral peptide. This combinatorial approach has two points of inhibition for R5-tropic HIV-1 and is also active against X4-tropic HIV-1. Here, we utilize the humanized bone marrow, liver, thymus (BLT) mouse model to characterize the in vivo efficacy of LVsh5/C46 (Cal-1) vector to engineer cellular resistance to HIV-1 pathogenesis. Human CD34+ hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSPC) either nonmodified or transduced with LVsh5/C46 vector were transplanted to generate control and treatment groups, respectively. Control and experimental groups displayed similar engraftment and multilineage hematopoietic differentiation that included robust CD4+ T-cell development. Splenocytes isolated from the treatment group were resistant to both R5- and X4-tropic HIV-1 during ex vivo challenge experiments. Treatment group animals challenged with R5-tropic HIV-1 displayed significant protection of CD4+ T-cells and reduced viral load within peripheral blood and lymphoid tissues up to 14 weeks postinfection. Gene-marking and transgene expression were confirmed stable at 26 weeks post-transplantation. These data strongly support the use of LVsh5/C46 lentiviral vector in gene and cell therapeutic applications for inhibition of HIV-1 infection.


Journal of Virology | 2007

Primary Cell Model for Activation-Inducible Human Immunodeficiency Virus

Bryan P. Burke; Helen J. Brown; Matthew D. Marsden; Gregory Bristol; Dimitrios N. Vatakis; Jerome A. Zack

ABSTRACT Quiescent T lymphocytes containing latent human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) provide a long-lived viral reservoir. This reservoir may be the source of active infection that is reinitiated following the cessation of antiretroviral therapy. Therefore, it is important to understand the mechanisms involved in latent infection to develop new strategies to eliminate the latent HIV reservoir. We have previously demonstrated that latently infected quiescent lymphocytes can be generated during thymopoiesis in vivo in the SCID-hu mouse system. However, there is still a pressing need for an in vitro model of HIV latency in primary human cells. Here, we present a novel in vitro model that recapitulates key aspects of dormant HIV infection. Using an enhanced green fluorescent protein-luciferase fusion protein-containing reporter virus, we have generated a stable infection in primary human CD4+ CD8+ thymocytes in the absence of viral gene expression. T-cell activation induces a >200-fold induction of reporter activity. The induced reporter activity originates from a fully reverse-transcribed and integrated genome. We further demonstrate that this model can be useful to study long terminal repeat regulation, as previously characterized NF-κB response element mutations decrease the activation of viral gene expression. This model can therefore be used to study intricate molecular aspects of activation-inducible HIV infection in primary cells.


Journal of Virology | 2006

Rapid Expression of Human Immunodeficiency Virus following Activation of Latently Infected Cells

Philip A. Arlen; David G. Brooks; Lian Y. Gao; Dimitrios N. Vatakis; Helen J. Brown; Jerome A. Zack

ABSTRACT The host cell activation state impacts the nature of human immunodeficiency virus infection. Activated cells facilitate productive infections; quiescent cells enable the virus to enter a latent state, the major obstacle to viral clearance. We wanted to understand how these differences affected viral gene expression. In quiescent cells activated prior to infection, viral RNA was seen 12 h postinfection; when cells were stimulated postinfection, viral RNA was not seen until 36 h postinfection. Up-regulation of viral RNA in latently infected cells occurred within 2 h poststimulation. This hierarchy also held true for viral protein production. These results may explain the rapid reemergence of viremia following termination of therapy.


Retrovirology | 2013

HIV restriction in quiescent CD4+T cells

Jerome A. Zack; Sohn G. Kim; Dimitrios N. Vatakis

The restriction of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) infection in quiescent CD4+ T cells has been an area of active investigation. Early studies have suggested that this T cell subset is refractory to infection by the virus. Subsequently it was demonstrated that quiescent cells could be infected at low levels; nevertheless these observations supported the earlier assertions of debilitating defects in the viral life cycle. This phenomenon raised hopes that identification of the block in quiescent cells could lead to the development of new therapies against HIV. As limiting levels of raw cellular factors such as nucleotides did not account for the block to infection, a number of groups pursued the identification of cellular proteins whose presence or absence may impact the permissiveness of quiescent T cells to HIV infection. A series of studies in the past few years have identified a number of host factors implicated in the block to infection. In this review, we will present the progress made, other avenues of investigation and the potential impact these studies have in the development of more effective therapies against HIV.


Blood | 2013

HIV-1 Infection of hematopoietic progenitor cells in vivo in humanized mice

Christopher C. Nixon; Dimitrios N. Vatakis; Scott N. Reichelderfer; Dhaval Dixit; Sohn G. Kim; Christel H. Uittenbogaart; Jerome A. Zack

HIV infection has been associated with defective hematopoiesis since the earliest days of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. Generation of all hematopoietic lineages suffers in the face of infection. The mechanisms by which HIV impairs normal blood cell development remain unclear, and direct infection of intermediate hematopoietic progenitors has not been established as a source of HIV-associated hematopoietic pathology. Here, we demonstrate infection of multiple subsets of highly purified intermediate hematopoietic progenitors by wild-type HIV both in vitro and in vivo. Although direct infection is clearly cytotoxic, we find that some infected progenitors can survive and harbor proviral DNA. We report intermediate hematopoietic progenitors to be a novel target of infection and their permissivity to infection increases with development. Further, the nonobese diabetic severe combined immunodeficiency common γ chain knockout-bone marrow-liver-thymus humanized mouse provides a unique model for studying the impact of HIV infection on bone marrow-based human hematopoiesis.


Immunologic Research | 2010

Quiescent T cells and HIV: an unresolved relationship

Dimitrios N. Vatakis; Christopher C. Nixon; Jerome A. Zack

The ability of HIV to infect quiescent CD4+ T cells has been a topic of intense debate. While early studies suggested that the virus could not infect this particular T cell subset, subsequent studies using more sensitive protocols demonstrated that these cells could inefficiently support HIV infection. Additional studies showed that the kinetics of infection in quiescent cells was delayed and multiple stages of the viral life cycle were marred by inefficiencies. Despite that, proviral DNA has been found in these cells presenting them as a potential viral reservoir. Therefore, a better understanding of the relationship between HIV and quiescent T cells may lead to further advances in the field of HIV.

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Jerome A. Zack

University of California

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Sohn G. Kim

University of California

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Dhaval Dixit

University of California

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Samson A. Chow

University of California

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Bernard Levin

University of California

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Bryan P. Burke

University of California

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Caius G. Radu

University of California

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