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Room Temperature Neutron Crystallography of Drug Resistant HIV-1 Protease Uncovers Limitations of X-ray Structural Analysis at 100 K.

Authors :
Gerlits O
Keen DA
Blakeley MP
Louis JM
Weber IT
Kovalevsky A
Source :
Journal of medicinal chemistry [J Med Chem] 2017 Mar 09; Vol. 60 (5), pp. 2018-2025. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Feb 28.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

HIV-1 protease inhibitors are crucial for treatment of HIV-1/AIDS, but their effectiveness is thwarted by rapid emergence of drug resistance. To better understand binding of clinical inhibitors to resistant HIV-1 protease, we used room-temperature joint X-ray/neutron (XN) crystallography to obtain an atomic-resolution structure of the protease triple mutant (V32I/I47V/V82I) in complex with amprenavir. The XN structure reveals a D <superscript>+</superscript> ion located midway between the inner Oδ1 oxygen atoms of the catalytic aspartic acid residues. Comparison of the current XN structure with our previous XN structure of the wild-type HIV-1 protease-amprenavir complex suggests that the three mutations do not significantly alter the drug-enzyme interactions. This is in contrast to the observations in previous 100 K X-ray structures of these complexes that indicated loss of interactions by the drug with the triple mutant protease. These findings, thus, uncover limitations of structural analysis of drug binding using X-ray structures obtained at 100 K.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1520-4804
Volume :
60
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of medicinal chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28195728
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jmedchem.6b01767