HIV is a virus that attacks the T cells. HIV may either actively replicate or become latent within host cells for years. Since HIV uses its own protein Tat to hijack the host CDK9-Cyclin complex for transcription, Tat is implicated in transcription-dependent HIV latency. To quantify the impact of Tat binding, we propose a computational framework to probe the dynamics of the CDK9-Cyclin interface and the ATP pocket reorganization upon binding by different Tat mutants. Specifically, we focus on mutations at three Tat residues P10, W11, and N12 that are known to interact directly with CDK9 based ...