Rosemary Bastian Arangassery, Nangarlia Aakansha, Bailey Lauren D, Holmes Andrew, Kalyana Sundaram R Venkat, Ang Charles, Moreira Diogo R M, Freedman Kevin, Duffy Caitlin, Contarino Mark, Abrams Cameron, Root Michael, Chaiken Irwin
From the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Drexel University College of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19102, the School of Biomedical Engineering, Science and Health Systems, Drexel University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104.
From the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Drexel University College of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19102.
J Biol Chem. 2015 Jan 2;290(1):529-43. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M114.608315. Epub 2014 Nov 4.
Entry of HIV-1 into host cells remains a compelling yet elusive target for developing agents to prevent infection. A peptide triazole (PT) class of entry inhibitor has previously been shown to bind to HIV-1 gp120, suppress interactions of the Env protein at host cell receptor binding sites, inhibit cell infection, and cause envelope spike protein breakdown, including gp120 shedding and, for some variants, virus membrane lysis. We found that gold nanoparticle-conjugated forms of peptide triazoles (AuNP-PT) exhibit substantially more potent antiviral effects against HIV-1 than corresponding peptide triazoles alone. Here, we sought to reveal the mechanism of potency enhancement underlying nanoparticle conjugate function. We found that altering the physical properties of the nanoparticle conjugate, by increasing the AuNP diameter and/or the density of PT conjugated on the AuNP surface, enhanced potency of infection inhibition to impressive picomolar levels. Further, compared with unconjugated PT, AuNP-PT was less susceptible to reduction of antiviral potency when the density of PT-competent Env spikes on the virus was reduced by incorporating a peptide-resistant mutant gp120. We conclude that potency enhancement of virolytic activity and corresponding irreversible HIV-1 inactivation of PTs upon AuNP conjugation derives from multivalent contact between the nanoconjugates and metastable Env spikes on the HIV-1 virus. The findings reveal that multispike engagement can exploit the metastability built into virus the envelope to irreversibly inactivate HIV-1 and provide a conceptual platform to design nanoparticle-based antiviral agents for HIV-1 specifically and putatively for metastable enveloped viruses generally.
HIV-1进入宿主细胞仍然是开发预防感染药物的一个引人关注但难以捉摸的靶点。一类肽三唑(PT)进入抑制剂此前已被证明可与HIV-1 gp120结合,抑制Env蛋白在宿主细胞受体结合位点的相互作用,抑制细胞感染,并导致包膜刺突蛋白分解,包括gp120脱落,对于某些变体,还会导致病毒膜裂解。我们发现,与肽三唑单独使用相比,金纳米颗粒偶联形式的肽三唑(AuNP-PT)对HIV-1表现出更强的抗病毒作用。在此,我们试图揭示纳米颗粒偶联物功能增强效力的机制。我们发现,通过增加AuNP直径和/或AuNP表面偶联的PT密度来改变纳米颗粒偶联物的物理性质,可将感染抑制效力提高到令人印象深刻的皮摩尔水平。此外,与未偶联的PT相比,当通过引入肽抗性突变体gp120降低病毒上具有PT活性的Env刺突密度时,AuNP-PT对抗病毒效力降低的敏感性较低。我们得出结论,AuNP偶联后PT的溶细胞活性增强以及相应的HIV-1不可逆失活源于纳米偶联物与HIV-1病毒上亚稳Env刺突之间的多价接触。这些发现表明,多刺突结合可以利用病毒包膜中固有的亚稳性来不可逆地灭活HIV-1,并为设计针对HIV-1以及可能针对一般亚稳包膜病毒的基于纳米颗粒的抗病毒药物提供了一个概念平台。