Program in Molecular Biophysics, Johns Hopkins University, 3400 N. Charles St. Baltimore, MD 21218, USA.
Program in Molecular Biophysics, Johns Hopkins University, 3400 N. Charles St. Baltimore, MD 21218, USA; Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Johns Hopkins University, 3400 N. Charles St. Baltimore, MD 21218, USA.
Structure. 2009 Dec 9;17(12):1636-1648. doi: 10.1016/j.str.2009.10.008.
Drug-resistant mutations (DRMs) in HIV-1 protease are a major challenge to antiretroviral therapy. Protease-substrate interactions that are determined to be critical for native selectivity could serve as robust targets for drug design that are immune to DRMs. In order to identify the structural mechanisms of selectivity, we developed a peptide-docking algorithm to predict the atomic structure of protease-substrate complexes and applied it to a large and diverse set of cleavable and noncleavable peptides. Cleavable peptides showed significantly lower energies of interaction than noncleavable peptides with six protease active-site residues playing the most significant role in discrimination. Surprisingly, all six residues correspond to sequence positions associated with drug resistance mutations, demonstrating that the very residues that are responsible for native substrate specificity in HIV-1 protease are altered during its evolution to drug resistance, suggesting that drug resistance and substrate selectivity may share common mechanisms.
HIV-1 蛋白酶中的耐药突变(DRMs)是抗逆转录病毒治疗的主要挑战。对于天然选择性至关重要的蛋白酶-底物相互作用可以作为针对耐药突变具有免疫性的药物设计的强大靶点。为了确定选择性的结构机制,我们开发了一种肽对接算法来预测蛋白酶-底物复合物的原子结构,并将其应用于大量多样的可切割和不可切割的肽。可切割的肽与六个蛋白酶活性位点残基的相互作用能量明显低于不可切割的肽,这六个残基在区分中起着最重要的作用。令人惊讶的是,所有六个残基都对应于与耐药突变相关的序列位置,这表明在 HIV-1 蛋白酶进化为耐药性的过程中,负责其天然底物特异性的残基发生了改变,这表明耐药性和底物选择性可能具有共同的机制。