Depatureaux Agnès, Quashie Peter K, Mesplède Thibault, Han Yingshan, Koubi Hannah, Plantier Jean-Christophe, Oliveira Maureen, Moisi Daniela, Brenner Bluma, Wainberg Mark A
McGill University AIDS Centre, Lady Davis Institute for Medical Research, Jewish General Hospital, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
Laboratoire associé au Centre National de Référence du VIH, Hopital Charles Nicole, CHU de Rouen, Rouen, France.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2014 Dec;58(12):7141-50. doi: 10.1128/AAC.03819-14. Epub 2014 Sep 15.
HIV-1 group O (HIV-O) is a rare HIV-1 variant characterized by a high number of polymorphisms, especially in the integrase coding region. As HIV-O integrase enzymes have not previously been studied, our aim was to assess the impact of HIV-O integrase polymorphisms on enzyme function and susceptibility to integrase inhibitors. Accordingly, we cloned and purified integrase proteins from each of HIV-1 group O clades A and B, an HIV-O divergent strain, and HIV-1 group M (HIV-M, subtype B), used as a reference. To assess enzymatic function of HIV-O integrase, we carried out strand transfer and 3' processing assays with various concentrations of substrate (DNA target and long terminal repeats [LTR], respectively) and characterized these enzymes for susceptibility to integrase strand transfer inhibitors (INSTIs) in cell-free assays and in tissue culture, in the absence or presence of various concentrations of several INSTIs. The inhibition constant (Ki) and 50% effective concentration (EC50) values were calculated for HIV-O integrases and HIV-O viruses, respectively, and compared with those of HIV-M. The results showed that HIV-O integrase displayed lower activity in strand transfer assays than did HIV-M enzyme, whereas 3' processing activities were similar to those of HIV-M. HIV-O integrases were more susceptible to raltegravir (RAL) in competitive inhibition assays and in tissue culture than were HIV-M enzymes and viruses, respectively. Molecular modeling suggests that two key polymorphic residues that are close to the integrase catalytic site, 74I and 153A, may play a role in these differences.
HIV-1 O组(HIV-O)是一种罕见的HIV-1变异株,其特点是多态性数量众多,尤其是在整合酶编码区。由于此前尚未对HIV-O整合酶进行研究,我们的目的是评估HIV-O整合酶多态性对酶功能以及对整合酶抑制剂敏感性的影响。因此,我们从HIV-1 O组A和B分支、一株HIV-O分化株以及用作对照的HIV-1 M组(HIV-M,B亚型)中分别克隆并纯化了整合酶蛋白。为评估HIV-O整合酶的酶功能,我们分别用不同浓度的底物(分别为DNA靶标和长末端重复序列[LTR])进行链转移和3'加工测定,并在无细胞测定和组织培养中,在存在或不存在多种不同浓度整合酶链转移抑制剂(INSTIs)的情况下,对这些酶对INSTIs的敏感性进行了表征。分别计算了HIV-O整合酶和HIV-O病毒的抑制常数(Ki)和50%有效浓度(EC50)值,并与HIV-M的相应值进行比较。结果表明,在链转移测定中,HIV-O整合酶的活性低于HIV-M酶,而3'加工活性与HIV-M相似。在竞争性抑制测定和组织培养中,HIV-O整合酶分别比HIV-M酶和病毒对拉替拉韦(RAL)更敏感。分子建模表明,靠近整合酶催化位点的两个关键多态性残基74I和153A可能在这些差异中起作用。