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Structural Studies of a Rationally Selected Multi-Drug Resistant HIV-1 Protease Reveal Synergistic Effect of Distal Mutations on Flap Dynamics

We report structural analysis of HIV protease variant PR(S17) which was rationally selected by machine learning to represent wide classes of highly drug-resistant variants. Crystal structures were solved of PR(S17) in the inhibitor-free form and in complex with antiviral inhibitor, darunavir. Despit...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Agniswamy, Johnson, Louis, John M., Roche, Julien, Harrison, Robert W., Weber, Irene T.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5161481/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27992544
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0168616
Descripción
Sumario:We report structural analysis of HIV protease variant PR(S17) which was rationally selected by machine learning to represent wide classes of highly drug-resistant variants. Crystal structures were solved of PR(S17) in the inhibitor-free form and in complex with antiviral inhibitor, darunavir. Despite its 17 mutations, PR(S17) has only one mutation (V82S) in the inhibitor/substrate binding cavity, yet exhibits high resistance to all clinical inhibitors. PR(S17) has none of the major mutations (I47V, I50V, I54ML, L76V and I84V) associated with darunavir resistance, but has 10,000-fold weaker binding affinity relative to the wild type PR. Comparable binding affinity of 8000-fold weaker than PR is seen for drug resistant mutant PR20, which bears 3 mutations associated with major resistance to darunavir (I47V, I54L and I84V). Inhibitor-free PR(S17) shows an open flap conformation with a curled tip correlating with G48V flap mutation. NMR studies on inactive PR(S17) (D25N) unambiguously confirm that the flaps adopt mainly an open conformation in solution very similar to that in the inhibitor-free crystal structure. In PR(S17), the hinge loop cluster of mutations, E35D, M36I and S37D, contributes to the altered flap dynamics by a mechanism similar to that of PR20. An additional K20R mutation anchors an altered conformation of the hinge loop. Flap mutations M46L and G48V in PR(S17)/DRV complex alter the Phe53 conformation by steric hindrance between the side chains. Unlike the L10F mutation in PR20, L10I in PR(S17) does not break the inter-subunit ion pair or diminish the dimer stability, consistent with a very low dimer dissociation constant comparable to that of wild type PR. Distal mutations A71V, L90M and I93L propagate alterations to the catalytic site of PR(S17). PR(S17) exhibits a molecular mechanism whereby mutations act synergistically to alter the flap dynamics resulting in significantly weaker binding yet maintaining active site contacts with darunavir.