HIV-1 Gag非切割位点PI抗性突变通过底物钳在硅中稳定蛋白酶/Gag底物复合物

BioChem Pub Date : 2021-11-05 DOI:10.3390/biochem1030015
G. Laco
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摘要

HIV-1蛋白酶活性位点抑制剂是抗逆转录病毒治疗的关键部分,尽管耐药性可能演变使治疗无效。蛋白酶抑制剂耐药性通常始于活性位点周围的原发性突变,这降低了抑制剂的结合,蛋白酶对底物切割位点残基P4-P4 '的亲和力,以及病毒复制。这通常伴随着蛋白酶底物凹槽的二次突变,通过增加蛋白酶对切割位点P12-P5/P5 ' -P12 '残基的亲和力来恢复病毒复制,同时保持抗性。然而,Gag基因的突变也会导致耐药性。Gag抗性突变可以发生在裂解位点(P12-P12’)以增加PR结合,也可以发生在非裂解位点。在这里,我们通过计算机表明,Gag非切割位点蛋白酶抑制剂抗性突变可以稳定蛋白酶与Gag切割位点的结合,这些位点在SP1/NC, SP2/p6和MA/CA两侧含有结构化的亚结构域。Gag非切割位点抗性突变协调了Gag底物相邻结构亚域之间的氢键相互作用网络,在与切割位点残基P12-P12 '结合的蛋白酶周围形成了一个底物钳。底物夹紧可能减缓蛋白酶与底物的分离,在抑制剂存在的情况下恢复裂解速率。原生Gag基板也可以形成稍弱的基板夹。这解释了Gag CA/SP1切割位点的切割速度慢350倍的原因,因为CA-SP1底物在切割位点两侧缺乏结构子结构域,因此不能在PR周围形成底物夹。
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HIV-1 Gag Non-Cleavage Site PI Resistance Mutations Stabilize Protease/Gag Substrate Complexes in Silico via a Substrate-Clamp
HIV-1 protease active site inhibitors are a key part of antiretroviral therapy, though resistance can evolve rendering therapy ineffective. Protease inhibitor resistance typically starts with primary mutations around the active site, which reduces inhibitor binding, protease affinity for substrate cleavage site residues P4-P4′, and viral replication. This is often followed by secondary mutations in the protease substrate-grooves which restore viral replication by increasing protease affinity for cleavage site residues P12-P5/P5′-P12′, while maintaining resistance. However, mutations in Gag alone can also result in resistance. The Gag resistance mutations can occur in cleavage sites (P12-P12′) to increase PR binding, as well as at non-cleavage sites. Here we show in silico that Gag non-cleavage site protease inhibitor resistance mutations can stabilize protease binding to Gag cleavage sites which contain structured subdomains on both sides: SP1/NC, SP2/p6, and MA/CA. The Gag non-cleavage site resistance mutations coordinated a network of H-bond interactions between the adjacent structured subdomains of the Gag substrates to form a substrate-clamp around the protease bound to cleavage site residues P12-P12′. The substrate-clamp likely slows protease disassociation from the substrate, restoring the cleavage rate in the presence of the inhibitor. Native Gag substrates can also form somewhat weaker substrate-clamps. This explains the 350-fold slower cleavage rate for the Gag CA/SP1 cleavage site in that the CA-SP1 substrate lacks structured subdomains on both sides of the cleavage site, and so cannot form a substrate-clamp around the PR.
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