Geleziunas Romas, Gallagher Karen, Zhang Hangchun, Bacheler Lee, Garber Sena, Wu Jing-Tao, Shi Guoen, Otto Michael J, Schinazi Raymond F, Erickson-Viitanen Susan
Department of Virology, The DuPont Pharmaceuticals Company (Bristol-Myers Squibb Pharmaceuticals Company), Del., USA.
Antivir Chem Chemother. 2003 Jan;14(1):49-59. doi: 10.1177/095632020301400105.
Nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) represent the cornerstone of highly active antiretroviral therapy when combined with non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NNRTIs) or HIV-1 protease inhibitors (PIs). Unlike the NNRTIs and PIs, NRTIs must be successively phosphorylated by cellular kinases to a triphosphate form, which represents the active metabolite possessing antiviral activity. Emergence of viral resistance to NRTIs has severely hampered treatment options for persons infected with HIV-1. As such, there is an urgent need to develop NRTIs capable of suppressing NRTI-resistant strains of HIV-1. We have recently reported that the cytidine analogue D-d4FC (DPC817, Reverset) effectively inhibits clinically prevalent resistant strains of HIV-1. In this report, we have extended these findings and now describe a detailed resistance profile for this novel NRTI. By examining a panel of 50 viruses carrying RTs derived from HIV-1 clinical isolates displaying a wide range of NRTI resistance mutations, we report that the median fold increase in effective antiviral concentration for such a panel of viruses is 3.2, which is comparable to tenofovir (2.8-fold) and didanosine (2.4-fold). D-d4FC is highly effective at inhibiting subsets of lamivudine- and zidovudine-resistant variants but, like other NRTIs, seems less potent against multi-NRTI-resistant viruses, particularly those carrying the Q151M complex of mutations. Finally, in vitro selections for HIV-1 mutants capable of replicating in the presence of D-d4FC yielded a mutant carrying the RT K65R mutation. This mutation confers 5.3- to 8.7-fold resistance to D-d4FC in vitro. These findings suggest that D-d4FC may represent an alternative NRTI for the treatment of individuals infected with lamivudine- and zidovudine-resistant strains of HIV-1.
核苷类逆转录酶抑制剂(NRTIs)与非核苷类逆转录酶抑制剂(NNRTIs)或HIV-1蛋白酶抑制剂(PIs)联合使用时,是高效抗逆转录病毒疗法的基石。与NNRTIs和PIs不同,NRTIs必须先后被细胞激酶磷酸化为三磷酸形式,三磷酸形式代表具有抗病毒活性的活性代谢物。对NRTIs产生病毒耐药性已严重阻碍了HIV-1感染者的治疗选择。因此,迫切需要开发能够抑制HIV-1的NRTI耐药毒株的NRTIs。我们最近报道,胞苷类似物D-d4FC(DPC817,Reverset)可有效抑制临床上流行的HIV-1耐药毒株。在本报告中,我们扩展了这些发现,现在描述了这种新型NRTI的详细耐药谱。通过检测一组50种携带源自HIV-1临床分离株的逆转录酶(RT)的病毒,这些分离株显示出广泛的NRTI耐药突变,我们报告称,该组病毒有效抗病毒浓度的中位数增加倍数为3.2,这与替诺福韦(2.8倍)和去羟肌苷(2.4倍)相当。D-d4FC在抑制拉米夫定和齐多夫定耐药变异株亚群方面非常有效,但与其他NRTIs一样,对多NRTI耐药病毒的效力似乎较低,尤其是那些携带Q151M复合突变的病毒。最后,在体外选择能够在D-d4FC存在下复制的HIV-1突变体,得到了一个携带RT K65R突变的突变体。该突变在体外赋予对D-d4FC 5.3至8.7倍的耐药性。这些发现表明,D-d4FC可能是治疗感染拉米夫定和齐多夫定耐药HIV-1毒株个体的另一种NRTI。