Bartonová Vanda, Král Vlastimil, Sieglová Irena, Brynda Jirí, Fábry Milan, Horejsí Magdalena, Kozísek Milan, Sasková Klára Grantz, Konvalinka Jan, Sedlácek Juraj, Rezácová Pavlína
Institute of Molecular Genetics, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Flemingovo nam. 2, 166 37 Prague 6, Czech Republic.
Antiviral Res. 2008 Jun;78(3):275-7. doi: 10.1016/j.antiviral.2008.01.009. Epub 2008 Feb 20.
The monoclonal antibodies 1696 and F11.2.32 strongly inhibit the activity of wild-type HIV-1 protease (PR) by binding to epitopes at the enzyme N-terminus (residues 1-6) and flap residues 36-46, respectively. Here we demonstrate that these antibodies are also potent inhibitors of PR variants resistant to active-site inhibitors used as anti-AIDS drugs. Our in vitro experiments revealed that the inhibitory potency of single-chain fragments (scFv) of these antibodies is not significantly affected by the presence of mutations in PR; inhibition constants for drug-resistant protease variants are 5-11 nM and 13-169 nM for scFv1696 and for scFvF11.2.32, respectively. Tethered dimer of HIV-1 PR variant proved to be a model protease variant resistant to dissociative inhibition by 1696, and, strikingly, it also displayed resistance to inhibition by F11.2.32 suggesting that dimer dissociation also plays a role in the inhibitory action of F11.2.32.