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I36T↑T mutation in South African subtype C (C-SA) HIV-1 protease significantly alters protease-drug interactions.

Authors :
Maseko SB
Padayachee E
Govender T
Sayed Y
Kruger G
Maguire GEM
Lin J
Source :
Biological chemistry [Biol Chem] 2017 Sep 26; Vol. 398 (10), pp. 1109-1117.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

The efficacy of HIV-1 protease (PR) inhibition therapies is often compromised by the emergence of mutations in the PR molecule that reduces the binding affinity of inhibitors while maintaining viable catalytic activity and affinity for natural substrates. In the present study, we used a recombinant HIV-1 C-SA PR and a recently reported variant for inhibition (Ki, IC50) and thermodynamic studies against nine clinically used inhibitors. This is the first time that binding free energies for C-SA PR and the mutant are reported. This variant PR harbours a mutation and insertion (I36T↑T) at position 36 of the C-SA HIV-1 PR, and did not show a significant difference in the catalytic effect of the HIV-1 PR. However, the nine clinically approved HIV PR drugs used in this study demonstrated weaker inhibition and lower binding affinities toward the variant when compared to the wild type HIV-1 PR. All the protease inhibitors (PIs), except Amprenavir and Ritonavir exhibited a significant decrease in binding affinity (p<0.0001). Darunavir and Nelfinavir exhibited the weakest binding affinity, 155- and 95-fold decreases respectively, toward the variant. Vitality values for the variant PR, against the seven selected PIs, confirm the impact of the mutation and insertion on the South African HIV-1 subtype C PR. This information has important clinical implications for thousands of patients in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1437-4315
Volume :
398
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Biological chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28525359
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1515/hsz-2017-0107