Christopher S. Bond Life Sciences Center, Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, University of Missouri School of Medicine, Columbia, MO 65211, USA.
J Biol Chem. 2012 Aug 24;287(35):29988-99. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M112.351551. Epub 2012 Jul 2.
Polymorphisms have poorly understood effects on drug susceptibility and may affect the outcome of HIV treatment. We have discovered that an HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT) polymorphism (RT(172K)) is present in clinical samples and in widely used laboratory strains (BH10), and it profoundly affects HIV-1 susceptibility to both nucleoside (NRTIs) and non-nucleoside RT inhibitors (NNRTIs) when combined with certain mutations. Polymorphism 172K significantly suppressed zidovudine resistance caused by excision (e.g. thymidine-associated mutations) and not by discrimination mechanism mutations (e.g. Q151M complex). Moreover, it attenuated resistance to nevirapine or efavirenz imparted by NNRTI mutations. Although 172K favored RT-DNA binding at an excisable pre-translocation conformation, it decreased excision by thymidine-associated mutation-containing RT. 172K affected DNA handling and decreased RT processivity without significantly affecting the k(cat)/K(m) values for dNTP. Surface plasmon resonance experiments revealed that RT(172K) decreased DNA binding by increasing the dissociation rate. Hence, the increased zidovudine susceptibility of RT(172K) results from its increased dissociation from the chain-terminated DNA and reduced primer unblocking. We solved a high resolution (2.15 Å) crystal structure of RT mutated at 172 and compared crystal structures of RT(172R) and RT(172K) bound to NNRTIs or DNA/dNTP. Our structural analyses highlight differences in the interactions between α-helix E (where 172 resides) and the active site β9-strand that involve the YMDD loop and the NNRTI binding pocket. Such changes may increase dissociation of DNA, thus suppressing excision-based NRTI resistance and also offset the effect of NNRTI resistance mutations thereby restoring NNRTI binding.
多态性对药物敏感性的影响尚未被充分了解,可能会影响 HIV 治疗的效果。我们发现,HIV-1 逆转录酶(RT)的一种多态性(RT(172K))存在于临床样本和广泛使用的实验室株(BH10)中,当与某些突变结合时,它会极大地影响 HIV-1 对核苷(NRTIs)和非核苷 RT 抑制剂(NNRTIs)的敏感性。多态性 172K 显著抑制了由切除(如胸腺嘧啶相关突变)而不是由区分机制突变(如 Q151M 复合物)引起的齐多夫定耐药性。此外,它还减弱了 NNRTI 突变赋予的对奈韦拉平或依法韦仑的耐药性。虽然 172K 有利于在可切除的前易位构象下 RT-DNA 结合,但它会降低含有胸腺嘧啶相关突变的 RT 的切除率。172K 影响 DNA 处理并降低 RT 的连续性,而不会显著影响 dNTP 的 k(cat)/K(m) 值。表面等离子体共振实验表明,RT(172K)通过增加解离速率来降低 DNA 结合。因此,RT(172K)增加齐多夫定敏感性是由于其从链终止的 DNA 中增加解离和减少引物去阻塞。我们解决了 RT 在 172 处突变的高分辨率(2.15 Å)晶体结构,并比较了 RT(172R)和 RT(172K)与 NNRTIs 或 DNA/dNTP 结合的晶体结构。我们的结构分析突出了位于α-螺旋 E(172 所在位置)和活性位点β9-链之间的相互作用的差异,这些差异涉及 YMDD 环和 NNRTI 结合口袋。这种变化可能会增加 DNA 的解离,从而抑制基于切除的 NRTI 耐药性,并且还可以抵消 NNRTI 耐药性突变的影响,从而恢复 NNRTI 结合。