Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces, Department of Theory and Bio-Systems, Science Park Golm, Potsdam, Germany.
Department of Chemistry, Shiraz University, Shiraz, Iran.
Proteins. 2020 Mar;88(3):476-484. doi: 10.1002/prot.25826. Epub 2019 Oct 21.
The HIV-1 protease is a major target of inhibitor drugs in AIDS therapies. The therapies are impaired by mutations of the HIV-1 protease that can lead to resistance to protease inhibitors. These mutations are classified into major mutations, which usually occur first and clearly reduce the susceptibility to protease inhibitors, and minor, accessory mutations that occur later and individually do not substantially affect the susceptibility to inhibitors. Major mutations are predominantly located in the active site of the HIV-1 protease and can directly interfere with inhibitor binding. Minor mutations, in contrast, are typically located distal to the active site. A central question is how these distal mutations contribute to resistance development. In this article, we present a systematic computational investigation of stability changes caused by major and minor mutations of the HIV-1 protease. As most small single-domain proteins, the HIV-1 protease is only marginally stable. Mutations that destabilize the folded, active state of the protease therefore can shift the conformational equilibrium towards the unfolded, inactive state. We find that the most frequent major mutations destabilize the HIV-1 protease, whereas roughly half of the frequent minor mutations are stabilizing. An analysis of protease sequences from patients in treatment indicates that the stabilizing minor mutations are frequently correlated with destabilizing major mutations, and that highly resistant HIV-1 proteases exhibit significant fractions of stabilizing mutations. Our results thus indicate a central role of minor mutations in balancing the marginal stability of the protease against the destabilization induced by the most frequent major mutations.
HIV-1 蛋白酶是艾滋病治疗中抑制剂药物的主要靶点。这些疗法受到 HIV-1 蛋白酶突变的影响,这些突变可能导致对蛋白酶抑制剂的耐药性。这些突变可分为主要突变和次要突变,主要突变通常首先发生,明显降低对蛋白酶抑制剂的敏感性,而次要突变是次要的,辅助性的,单独发生时不会显著影响抑制剂的敏感性。主要突变主要位于 HIV-1 蛋白酶的活性部位,可直接干扰抑制剂的结合。相比之下,次要突变通常位于活性部位之外。一个核心问题是这些远端突变如何导致耐药性的发展。在本文中,我们系统地计算研究了 HIV-1 蛋白酶的主要和次要突变引起的稳定性变化。与大多数小的单域蛋白一样,HIV-1 蛋白酶的稳定性很差。因此,使蛋白酶折叠的活性状态不稳定的突变可以将构象平衡向未折叠的非活性状态转移。我们发现最常见的主要突变会使 HIV-1 蛋白酶失稳,而大约一半的常见次要突变是稳定的。对治疗中患者的蛋白酶序列进行分析表明,稳定的次要突变经常与不稳定的主要突变相关,而高度耐药的 HIV-1 蛋白酶显示出大量稳定的突变。因此,我们的结果表明次要突变在平衡蛋白酶的边缘稳定性方面起着核心作用,以抵抗最常见的主要突变引起的失稳。