Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Inflammatory Diseases Institute, and the Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
Gastroenterology. 2011 Feb;140(2):667-75. doi: 10.1053/j.gastro.2010.10.056. Epub 2010 Nov 4.
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Several small molecule inhibitors of the hepatitis C virus (HCV) nonstructural protein (NS) 3/4A protease have advanced successfully to clinical trials. However, the selection of drug-resistant mutants is a significant issue with protease inhibitors (PIs). A variety of amino acid substitutions in the protease domain of NS3 can lead to PI resistance. Many of these significantly impair the replication fitness of HCV RNA replicons. However, it is not known whether these mutations also adversely affect infectious virus assembly and release, processes in which NS3 also participates.
We studied the impact of 25 previously identified PI-resistance mutations on the capacity of genotype 1a H77S RNA to replicate in cell culture and produce infectious virus.
Most PI-resistance mutations resulted in moderate loss of replication competence, although several (V36A/L/M, R109K, and D168E) showed fitness comparable to wild type, whereas others (S138T and A156V) were severely impaired both in RNA replication and infectious virus production. Although reductions in RNA replication capacity correlated with decreased yields of infectious virus for most mutations, a subset of mutants (Q41R, F43S, R155T, A156S, and I170A/T) showed greater impairment in their ability to produce virus than predicted from reductions in RNA replication capacity. Detailed examination of the I170A mutant showed no defect in release of virus from cells and no significant difference in specific infectivity of extracellular virus particles.
Replicon-based assays might underestimate the loss of fitness caused by PI-resistance mutations, because some mutations in the NS3 protease domain specifically impair late steps in the viral life cycle that involve intracellular assembly of infectious virus.
几种丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)非结构蛋白(NS)3/4A 蛋白酶的小分子抑制剂已成功进入临床试验阶段。然而,蛋白酶抑制剂(PI)的耐药突变选择是一个重大问题。NS3 蛋白酶结构域中的多种氨基酸取代可导致 PI 耐药。这些取代中的许多显著损害 HCV RNA 复制子的复制适应性。然而,尚不清楚这些突变是否也对感染性病毒的组装和释放产生不利影响,而 NS3 也参与了这些过程。
我们研究了 25 种先前确定的 PI 耐药突变对基因型 1a H77S RNA 在细胞培养中复制和产生感染性病毒的能力的影响。
大多数 PI 耐药突变导致复制适应性中度丧失,尽管有几种(V36A/L/M、R109K 和 D168E)表现出与野生型相当的适应性,而其他几种(S138T 和 A156V)在 RNA 复制和感染性病毒产生方面均严重受损。尽管大多数突变的 RNA 复制能力降低与传染性病毒产量降低相关,但一部分突变体(Q41R、F43S、R155T、A156S 和 I170A/T)在产生病毒的能力方面的受损程度大于 RNA 复制能力降低所预测的程度。对 I170A 突变体的详细检查表明,病毒从细胞中的释放没有缺陷,并且细胞外病毒颗粒的特异性感染力也没有明显差异。
基于复制子的测定可能低估了 PI 耐药突变引起的适应性丧失,因为 NS3 蛋白酶结构域中的某些突变特异性地损害了涉及感染性病毒细胞内组装的病毒生命周期的后期步骤。