Weber Jan, Mesters Jeroen R, Lepsík Martin, Prejdová Jana, Svec Martin, Sponarová Jana, Mlcochová Petra, Skalická Kristina, Strísovský Kvido, Uhlíková Tána, Soucek Milan, Machala Ladislav, Stanková Marie, Vondrásek Jirí, Klimkait Thomas, Kraeusslich Hans Georg, Hilgenfeld Rolf, Konvalinka Jan
Institute of Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Protease of Human Pathogens, Flemingovo n. 2, CZ-16610 Praha 6, Czech Republic.
J Mol Biol. 2002 Dec 6;324(4):739-54. doi: 10.1016/s0022-2836(02)01139-7.
Protease inhibitors (PIs) are an important class of drugs for the treatment of HIV infection. However, in the course of treatment, resistant viral variants with reduced sensitivity to PIs often emerge and become a major obstacle to successful control of viral load. On the basis of a compound equipotently inhibiting HIV-1 and 2 proteases (PR), we have designed a pseudopeptide inhibitor, QF34, that efficiently inhibits a wide variety of PR variants. In order to analyze the potency of the inhibitor, we constructed PR species harboring the typical (signature) mutations that confer resistance to commercially available PIs. Kinetic analyses showed that these mutated PRs were inhibited up to 1,000-fold less efficiently by the clinically approved PIs. In contrast, all PR species were effectively inhibited by QF34. In a clinical study, we have monitored 30 HIV-positive patients in the Czech Republic undergoing highly active antiretroviral therapy, and have identified highly PI resistant variants. Kinetic analyses revealed that QF34 retained its subnanomolar potency against multi-drug resistant PR variants. X-ray crystallographic analysis and molecular modeling experiments explained the wide specificity of QF34: this inhibitor binds to the PR in an unusual manner, thus avoiding contact sites that are mutated upon resistance development, and the unusual binding mode and consequently the binding energy is therefore preserved in the complex with a resistant variant. These results suggest a promising route for the design of second-generation PIs that are active against a variety of resistant PR variants.
蛋白酶抑制剂(PIs)是治疗HIV感染的一类重要药物。然而,在治疗过程中,对PIs敏感性降低的耐药病毒变体经常出现,成为成功控制病毒载量的主要障碍。基于一种能等效抑制HIV-1和2蛋白酶(PR)的化合物,我们设计了一种假肽抑制剂QF34,它能有效抑制多种PR变体。为了分析该抑制剂的效力,我们构建了携带对市售PIs产生耐药性的典型(标志性)突变的PR物种。动力学分析表明,这些突变的PR被临床批准的PIs抑制的效率降低了多达1000倍。相比之下,所有PR物种都被QF34有效抑制。在一项临床研究中,我们监测了捷克共和国30名接受高效抗逆转录病毒治疗的HIV阳性患者,并鉴定出高度耐PI的变体。动力学分析表明,QF34对多重耐药PR变体仍保持其亚纳摩尔效力。X射线晶体学分析和分子模拟实验解释了QF34的广泛特异性:这种抑制剂以一种不寻常的方式与PR结合,从而避开了耐药性产生时发生突变的接触位点,因此不寻常的结合模式以及由此产生的结合能在与耐药变体的复合物中得以保留。这些结果为设计对多种耐药PR变体有效的第二代PIs指明了一条有前景的途径。