Flap-site fragment restores back wild-type behaviour in resistant form of HIV protease
Cargando...
Fecha
Título de la revista
ISSN de la revista
Título del volumen
Editor
Wiley Online Library
Resumen
HIV-1 protease (HIV-PR) performs a vital step in the virus life cycle which makes it an excellent target for drug therapy. However, due to the error-prone of HIV reverse transcriptase, mutations in HIV-PR often occur, inducing drug-resistance to inhibitors. Some HIV-PR mutations can make the flaps of the enzyme more flexible thus increasing the flaps opening rate and inhibitor releasing. It has been shown that by targeting novel binding sites on HIV-PR with small molecules, it is possible to alter the equilibrium of flap conformational states. A previous frag-ment-based crystallographic screen have found two novel binding sites for small fragments in the inhibited, closed form of HIV-PR, termed flap and exo sites. While these experiments were performed in wild type HIV-PR, it still remains to be proven whether these small fragments can stabilize the closed conformation of flaps in resistant forms of the enzyme. Here we performed Molecular Dynamics simulations of wild type and mutant form of HIV-PR bound to inhibitor TL-3. Simulations show that on going from wild type to 6X mutant the equilibrium shifts from closed to semi-open conformation of flaps. However, fragment Br6 is placed at flap site of mutant form, the enzyme is restored back to closed conformation. This finding supports the hypothesis that allosteric inhibitors, together with active site inhibitors could increase the number of point mutations necessary for appreciable clinical resistance to AIDS therapy.
Descripción
Palabras clave
Citación
Luchi, Adriano Martín, et al., 2018. Flap-site fragment restores back wild-type behaviour in resistant form of HIV protease. Molecular Informatics. Weinheim: Wiley Online Library, vol. 37, no. 12, p. 1-10. E-ISSN 1868-1751.
Colecciones
Aprobación
Revisión
Complementado por
Referenciado por
Licencia Creative Commons
Excepto donde se indique lo contrario, la licencia de este ítem se describe como openAccess

