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Identification of novel bifunctional HIV-1 reverse transcriptase inhibitors

Authors :
Youwei Yan
Ernest Asante-Appiah
Ming-Tain Lai
Hua-Poo Su
Michael D. Miller
Paul Tawa
Anick Auger
Daria J. Hazuda
Deping Wang
Roman A. Melnyk
Source :
The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy. 73(1)
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Objectives The increasing prevalence of mutations in HIV-1 reverse transcriptase (RT) that confer resistance to existing NRTIs and NNRTIs underscores the need to develop RT inhibitors with novel mode-of-inhibition and distinct resistance profiles. Methods Biochemical assays were employed to identify inhibitors of RT activity and characterize their mode of inhibition. The antiviral activity of the inhibitors was assessed by cell-based assays using laboratory HIV-1 isolates and MT4 cells. RT variants were purified via avidin affinity columns. Results Compound A displayed equal or greater potency against many common NNRTI-resistant RTs (K103N and Y181C RTs) relative to WT RT. Despite possessing certain NNRTI-like properties, such as being unable to inhibit an engineered variant of RT lacking an NNRTI-binding pocket, we found that compound A was dependent on Mg2+ for binding to RT. Optimization of compound A led to more potent analogues, which retained similar activities against WT and K103N mutant viruses with submicromolar potency in a cell-based assay. One of the analogues, compound G, was crystallized in complex with RT and the structure was determined at 2.6 A resolution. The structure indicated that compound G simultaneously interacts with the active site (Asp186), the highly conserved primer grip region (Leu234 and Trp229) and the NNRTI-binding pocket (Tyr188). Conclusions These findings reveal a novel class of RT bifunctional inhibitors that are not sensitive to the most common RT mutations, which can be further developed to address the deficiency of current RT inhibitors.

Details

ISSN :
14602091
Volume :
73
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of antimicrobial chemotherapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f8fc37da4c9ac9ea736a85d72bce6d5f