Huang Szu-Wei, Briganti Lorenzo, Annamalai Arun S, Greenwood Juliet, Shkriabai Nikoloz, Haney Reed, Armstrong Michael L, Wempe Michael F, Singh Satya Prakash, Francis Ashwanth C, Engelman Alan N, Kvaratskhelia Mamuka
Division of Infectious Diseases, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado, United States of America.
Department of Cancer Immunology and Virology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS Pathog. 2025 Jan 27;21(1):e1012862. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1012862. eCollection 2025 Jan.
Lenacapavir (LEN) is a highly potent, long-acting antiretroviral medication for treating people infected with muti-drug-resistant HIV-1 phenotypes. The inhibitor targets multifaceted functions of the viral capsid protein (CA) during HIV-1 replication. Previous studies have mainly focused on elucidating LEN's mode of action during viral ingress. Additionally, the inhibitor has been shown to interfere with mature capsid assembly during viral egress. However, the mechanism for how LEN affects HIV-1 maturation is unknown. Here, we show that pharmacologically relevant LEN concentrations do not impair proteolytic processing of Gag in virions. Instead, we have elucidated the primary mechanism for highly potent inhibition of HIV-1 maturation by sub-stoichiometric LEN:CA ratios. The inhibitor exerts opposing effects on formation of CA pentamers versus hexamers, the key capsomere intermediates in mature capsid assembly. LEN impairs formation of pentamers, whereas it induces assembly of hexameric lattices by imposing an opened CA conformation and stabilizing a dimeric form of CA. Consequently, LEN treatment results in morphologically atypical virus particles containing malformed, hyper-stable CA assemblies, which fail to infect target cells. Moreover, we have uncovered an inverse correlation between inhibitor potency and CA levels in cell culture assays, which accounts for LEN's ability to potently (with picomolar EC50 values) inhibit HIV-1 maturation at clinically relevant drug concentrations.
来那卡韦(LEN)是一种高效、长效的抗逆转录病毒药物,用于治疗感染多药耐药HIV-1表型的患者。该抑制剂在HIV-1复制过程中靶向病毒衣壳蛋白(CA)的多方面功能。以往的研究主要集中在阐明LEN在病毒侵入过程中的作用模式。此外,已证明该抑制剂在病毒释放过程中会干扰成熟衣壳的组装。然而,LEN如何影响HIV-1成熟的机制尚不清楚。在这里,我们表明,与药理相关的LEN浓度不会损害病毒粒子中Gag的蛋白水解加工。相反,我们阐明了亚化学计量的LEN:CA比率高效抑制HIV-1成熟的主要机制。该抑制剂对CA五聚体与六聚体的形成产生相反的影响,CA五聚体与六聚体是成熟衣壳组装中的关键衣壳粒中间体。LEN会损害五聚体的形成,而它通过施加开放的CA构象并稳定CA的二聚体形式来诱导六聚体晶格的组装。因此,LEN处理会导致形态上不典型的病毒颗粒,其含有畸形、超稳定的CA组装体,这些病毒颗粒无法感染靶细胞。此外,我们在细胞培养试验中发现了抑制剂效力与CA水平之间的负相关,这解释了LEN在临床相关药物浓度下能够以皮摩尔EC50值有效抑制HIV-1成熟的能力。