Structural analyses of 2015-updated drug-resistant mutations in HIV-1 protease: an implication of protease inhibitor cross-resistance.

Autor: Chinh Tran-To Su, Wei-Li Ling, Wai-Heng Lua, Yu-Xuan Haw, Gan, Samuel Ken-En
Předmět:
Zdroj: BMC Bioinformatics; 2016 Suppl 19, Vol. 17, p119-128, 10p, 2 Diagrams, 4 Charts, 1 Graph
Abstrakt: Background: Strategies to control HIV for improving the quality of patient lives have been aided by the Highly Active Anti-Retroviral Therapy (HAART), which consists of a cocktail of inhibitors targeting key viral enzymes. Numerous new drugs have been developed over the past few decades but viral resistances to these drugs in the targeted viral enzymes are increasingly reported. Nonetheless the acquired mutations often reduce viral fitness and infectivity. Viral compensatory secondary-line mutations mitigate this loss of fitness, equipping the virus with a broad spectrum of resistance against these drugs. While structural understanding of the viral protease and its drug resistance mutations have been well established, the interconnectivity and development of structural crossresistance remain unclear. This paper reports the structural analyses of recent clinical mutations on the drug crossresistance effects from various protease and protease inhibitors (PIs) complexes. Methods: Using the 2015 updated clinical HIV protease mutations, we constructed a structure-based correlation network and a minimum-spanning tree (MST) based on the following features: (i) topology of the PI-binding pocket, (ii) allosteric effects of the mutations and (iii) protease structural stability. Results and conclusion: Analyis of the network and the MST of dominant mutations conferring resistance to the seven PIs (Atazanavir-ATV, Darunavir-DRV, Indinavir-IDV, Lopinavir-LPV, Nelfinavir-NFV, Saquinavir-SQV and Tipranavir- TPV) showed that cross-resistance can develop easily across NFV, SQV, LPV, IDV and DRV, but not for ATV or TPV. Through estimation of the changes in vibrational entropies caused by each reported mutation, some secondary mutations were found to destabilize protease structure. Our findings provide an insight into the mechanism of PI cross-resistance and may also be useful in guiding the selection of PI in clinical treatment to delay the onset of cross drug resistance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index