UNC Center for AIDS Research, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2012 Feb;56(2):623-33. doi: 10.1128/AAC.05549-11. Epub 2011 Nov 14.
Resistance-associated mutations in the HIV-1 protease modify viral fitness through changes in the catalytic activity and altered binding affinity for substrates and inhibitors. In this report, we examine the effects of 31 mutations at 26 amino acid positions in protease to determine their impact on infectivity and protease inhibitor sensitivity. We found that primary resistance mutations individually decrease fitness and generally increase sensitivity to protease inhibitors, indicating that reduced virion-associated protease activity reduces virion infectivity and the reduced level of per virion protease activity is then more easily titrated by a protease inhibitor. Conversely, mutations at more variable positions (compensatory mutations) confer low-level decreases in sensitivity to all protease inhibitors with little effect on infectivity. We found significant differences in the observed effect on infectivity with a pseudotype virus assay that requires the protease to cleave the cytoplasmic tail of the amphotropic murine leukemia virus (MuLV) Env protein. Additionally, we were able to mimic the fitness loss associated with resistance mutations by directly reducing the level of virion-associated protease activity. Virions containing 50% of a D25A mutant protease were 3- to 5-fold more sensitive to protease inhibitors. This level of reduction in protease activity also resulted in a 2-fold increase in sensitivity to nonnucleoside inhibitors of reverse transcriptase and a similar increase in sensitivity to zidovudine (AZT), indicating a pleiotropic effect associated with reduced protease activity. These results highlight the interplay between enzyme activity, viral fitness, and inhibitor mechanism and sensitivity in the closed system of the viral replication complex.
HIV-1 蛋白酶中的耐药相关突变通过改变催化活性以及改变与底物和抑制剂的结合亲和力来改变病毒适应性。在本报告中,我们研究了 26 个氨基酸位置的 31 个突变对蛋白酶的影响,以确定它们对感染性和蛋白酶抑制剂敏感性的影响。我们发现,主要耐药突变单独降低适应性,通常增加对蛋白酶抑制剂的敏感性,表明病毒相关蛋白酶活性降低会降低病毒感染力,而每病毒颗粒蛋白酶活性的降低水平则更容易被蛋白酶抑制剂滴定。相反,在更可变位置(代偿性突变)的突变赋予对所有蛋白酶抑制剂的低水平降低敏感性,对感染性影响很小。我们发现,在需要蛋白酶切割嗜性鼠白血病病毒(MuLV)Env 蛋白细胞质尾巴的假型病毒测定中,观察到的对感染性的影响存在显著差异。此外,我们通过直接降低病毒相关蛋白酶活性的水平,模拟与耐药突变相关的适应性丧失。含有 50% D25A 突变蛋白酶的病毒粒子对蛋白酶抑制剂的敏感性提高了 3-5 倍。这种蛋白酶活性的降低水平也导致逆转录酶非核苷抑制剂的敏感性增加了 2 倍,齐多夫定(AZT)的敏感性增加了相似倍数,表明与降低蛋白酶活性相关的多效性效应。这些结果突出了酶活性、病毒适应性和抑制剂机制与敏感性在病毒复制复合物封闭系统中的相互作用。