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Structure-based Drug Design Targeting an Inactive RNA Conformation: Exploiting the Flexibility of HIV-1 TAR RNA
- Source :
- Journal of Molecular Biology. 336:625-638
- Publication Year :
- 2004
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2004.
-
Abstract
- The targeting of RNA for the design of novel anti-viral compounds represents an area of vast potential. We have used NMR and computational methods to model the interaction of a series of synthetic inhibitors of the in vitro RNA binding activities of a peptide derived from the transcriptional activator protein, Tat, from human immunodeficiency virus type 1. Inhibition has been measured through the monitering of fluorescence resonance energy transfer between fluorescently labeled peptide and RNA components. A series of compounds containing a bi-aryl heterocycle as one of the three substituents on a benzylic scaffold, induce a novel, inactive TAR conformation by stacking between base-pairs at the site of a three-base bulge within TAR. The development of this series resulted in an enhancement in potency (with Ki < 100 nM in an in vitro assay) and the removal of problematic guanidinium moieties. Ligands from this series can act as inhibitors of Tat-induced transcription in a cell-free system. This study validates the drug design strategy of using a ligand to target the RNA receptor in a non-functional conformation.
- Subjects :
- Gene Expression Regulation, Viral
Models, Molecular
Anti-HIV Agents
Protein Conformation
Molecular Sequence Data
Peptide
Guanidines
Structure-Activity Relationship
Structural Biology
Transcription (biology)
Humans
Receptor
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Biomolecular
Molecular Biology
chemistry.chemical_classification
Base Sequence
Molecular Structure
Chemistry
Ligand
RNA Conformation
Nuclear Proteins
RNA-Binding Proteins
RNA
In vitro
Förster resonance energy transfer
Biochemistry
Drug Design
Gene Products, tat
HIV-1
Nucleic Acid Conformation
tat Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus
Peptides
Protein Binding
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00222836
- Volume :
- 336
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Molecular Biology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....c38823e7cf8b030a960ad7f6537c5b8e