Christopher Bond Life Sciences Center, Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri 65211, USA.
J Biol Chem. 2009 Dec 18;284(51):35681-91. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M109.036616.
Nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) are employed in first line therapies for the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. They generally lack a 3'-hydroxyl group, and thus when incorporated into the nascent DNA they prevent further elongation. In this report we show that 4'-ethynyl-2-fluoro-2'-deoxyadenosine (EFdA), a nucleoside analog that retains a 3'-hydroxyl moiety, inhibited HIV-1 replication in activated peripheral blood mononuclear cells with an EC(50) of 0.05 nm, a potency several orders of magnitude better than any of the current clinically used NRTIs. This exceptional antiviral activity stems in part from a mechanism of action that is different from approved NRTIs. Reverse transcriptase (RT) can use EFdA-5'-triphosphate (EFdA-TP) as a substrate more efficiently than the natural substrate, dATP. Importantly, despite the presence of a 3'-hydroxyl, the incorporated EFdA monophosphate (EFdA-MP) acted mainly as a de facto terminator of further RT-catalyzed DNA synthesis because of the difficulty of RT translocation on the nucleic acid primer possessing 3'-terminal EFdA-MP. EFdA-TP is thus a translocation-defective RT inhibitor (TDRTI). This diminished translocation kept the primer 3'-terminal EFdA-MP ideally located to undergo phosphorolytic excision. However, net phosphorolysis was not substantially increased, because of the apparently facile reincorporation of the newly excised EFdA-TP. Our molecular modeling studies suggest that the 4'-ethynyl fits into a hydrophobic pocket defined by RT residues Ala-114, Tyr-115, Phe-160, and Met-184 and the aliphatic chain of Asp-185. These interactions, which contribute to both enhanced RT utilization of EFdA-TP and difficulty in the translocation of 3'-terminal EFdA-MP primers, underlie the mechanism of action of this potent antiviral nucleoside.
核苷逆转录酶抑制剂(NRTIs)被用于治疗人类免疫缺陷病毒(HIV)感染的一线治疗。它们通常缺乏 3'-羟基,因此当它们掺入新生 DNA 时,会阻止进一步延伸。在本报告中,我们显示 4'-乙炔基-2-氟-2'-脱氧腺苷(EFdA),一种保留 3'-羟基部分的核苷类似物,以 0.05nm 的 EC(50)抑制激活的外周血单核细胞中的 HIV-1 复制,效力比任何当前临床使用的 NRTIs 高出几个数量级。这种异常的抗病毒活性部分源于一种与批准的 NRTIs 不同的作用机制。逆转录酶(RT)可以更有效地将 EFdA-5'-三磷酸(EFdA-TP)用作底物,而不是天然底物 dATP。重要的是,尽管存在 3'-羟基,但掺入的 EFdA 单磷酸(EFdA-MP)主要充当事实上的终止剂,阻止进一步的 RT 催化 DNA 合成,因为 RT 在具有 3'-末端 EFdA-MP 的核酸引物上的易位困难。EFdA-TP 因此是一种易位缺陷型 RT 抑制剂(TDRTI)。这种易位减少使引物 3'-末端 EFdA-MP 理想地位于进行磷酰裂解切除的位置。然而,由于新切除的 EFdA-TP 显然易于重新掺入,因此净磷酰裂解并未显著增加。我们的分子建模研究表明,4'-乙炔基适合由 RT 残基 Ala-114、Tyr-115、Phe-160 和 Met-184 以及 Asp-185 的脂肪链定义的疏水性口袋。这些相互作用有助于增强 RT 对 EFdA-TP 的利用以及 3'-末端 EFdA-MP 引物易位的困难,是这种有效的抗病毒核苷作用机制的基础。