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A Sensitive Assay Using A Native Protein Substrate For Screening Hiv-1 Maturation Inhibitors Targeting The Protease Cleavage Site Between The Matrix And Capsid, Sook-Kyung Lee, Nancy Cheng, Emily Hull-Ryde, Marc Potempa, Celia Schiffer, William Janzen, Ronald Swanstrom Jan 2015

A Sensitive Assay Using A Native Protein Substrate For Screening Hiv-1 Maturation Inhibitors Targeting The Protease Cleavage Site Between The Matrix And Capsid, Sook-Kyung Lee, Nancy Cheng, Emily Hull-Ryde, Marc Potempa, Celia Schiffer, William Janzen, Ronald Swanstrom

Celia A. Schiffer

The matrix/capsid processing site in the HIV-1 Gag precursor is likely the most sensitive target to inhibit HIV-1 replication. We have previously shown that modest incomplete processing at the site leads to a complete loss of virion infectivity. In the study presented here, a sensitive assay based on fluorescence polarization that can monitor cleavage at the MA/CA site in the context of the folded protein substrate is described. The substrate, an MA/CA fusion protein, was labeled with the fluorescein-based FlAsH (fluorescein arsenical hairpin) reagent that binds to a tetracysteine motif (CCGPCC) that was introduced within the N-terminal domain of CA. …


Substrate Envelope-Designed Potent Hiv-1 Protease Inhibitors To Avoid Drug Resistance, Madhavi Nalam, Akbar Ali, G. S. Kiran Kumar Reddy, Hong Cao, Saima Anjum, Michael Altman, Nese Yilmaz, Bruce Tidor, Tariq Rana, Celia Schiffer Jan 2015

Substrate Envelope-Designed Potent Hiv-1 Protease Inhibitors To Avoid Drug Resistance, Madhavi Nalam, Akbar Ali, G. S. Kiran Kumar Reddy, Hong Cao, Saima Anjum, Michael Altman, Nese Yilmaz, Bruce Tidor, Tariq Rana, Celia Schiffer

Celia A. Schiffer

The rapid evolution of HIV under selective drug pressure has led to multidrug resistant (MDR) strains that evade standard therapies. We designed highly potent HIV-1 protease inhibitors (PIs) using the substrate envelope model, which confines inhibitors within the consensus volume of natural substrates, providing inhibitors less susceptible to resistance because a mutation affecting such inhibitors will simultaneously affect viral substrate processing. The designed PIs share a common chemical scaffold but utilize various moieties that optimally fill the substrate envelope, as confirmed by crystal structures. The designed PIs retain robust binding to MDR protease variants and display exceptional antiviral potencies against …


Cooperative Effects Of Drug-Resistance Mutations In The Flap Region Of Hiv-1 Protease, Jennifer Foulkes-Murzycki, Christina Rosi, Nese Yilmaz, Robert Shafer, Celia Schiffer Jul 2013

Cooperative Effects Of Drug-Resistance Mutations In The Flap Region Of Hiv-1 Protease, Jennifer Foulkes-Murzycki, Christina Rosi, Nese Yilmaz, Robert Shafer, Celia Schiffer

Celia A. Schiffer

Understanding the interdependence of multiple mutations in conferring drug resistance is crucial to the development of novel and robust inhibitors. As HIV-1 protease continues to adapt and evade inhibitors while still maintaining the ability to specifically recognize and efficiently cleave its substrates, the problem of drug resistance has become more complicated. Under the selective pressure of therapy, correlated mutations accumulate throughout the enzyme to compromise inhibitor binding, but characterizing their energetic interdependency is not straightforward. A particular drug resistant variant (L10I/G48V/I54V/V82A) displays extreme entropy-enthalpy compensation relative to wild-type enzyme but a similar variant (L10I/G48V/I54A/V82A) does not. Individual mutations of sites …


Structural And Thermodynamic Basis Of Amprenavir/Darunavir And Atazanavir Resistance In Hiv-1 Protease With Mutations At Residue 50, Seema Mittal, Rajintha Bandaranayake, Nancy King, Moses Prabu-Jeyabalan, Madhavi Nalam, Ellen Nalivaika, Nese Yilmaz, Celia Schiffer Jul 2013

Structural And Thermodynamic Basis Of Amprenavir/Darunavir And Atazanavir Resistance In Hiv-1 Protease With Mutations At Residue 50, Seema Mittal, Rajintha Bandaranayake, Nancy King, Moses Prabu-Jeyabalan, Madhavi Nalam, Ellen Nalivaika, Nese Yilmaz, Celia Schiffer

Celia A. Schiffer

Drug resistance occurs through a series of subtle changes that maintain substrate recognition but no longer permit inhibitor binding. In HIV-1 protease, mutations at I50 are associated with such subtle changes that confer differential resistance to specific inhibitors. Residue I50 is located at the protease flap tips, closing the active site upon ligand binding. Under selective drug pressure, I50V/L substitutions emerge in patients, compromising drug susceptibility and leading to treatment failure. The I50V substitution is often associated with amprenavir (APV) and darunavir (DRV) resistance, while the I50L substitution is observed in patients failing atazanavir (ATV) therapy. To explain how APV, …


Extreme Entropy-Enthalpy Compensation In A Drug-Resistant Variant Of Hiv-1 Protease, Nancy King, Moses Prabu-Jeyabalan, Rajintha Bandaranayake, Madhavi Nalam, Ellen Nalivaika, Aysegul Ozen, Turkan Haliloglu, Nese Yilmaz, Celia Schiffer Oct 2012

Extreme Entropy-Enthalpy Compensation In A Drug-Resistant Variant Of Hiv-1 Protease, Nancy King, Moses Prabu-Jeyabalan, Rajintha Bandaranayake, Madhavi Nalam, Ellen Nalivaika, Aysegul Ozen, Turkan Haliloglu, Nese Yilmaz, Celia Schiffer

Celia A. Schiffer

The development of HIV-1 protease inhibitors has been the historic paradigm of rational structure-based drug design, where structural and thermodynamic analyses have assisted in the discovery of novel inhibitors. While the total enthalpy and entropy change upon binding determine the affinity, often the thermodynamics are considered in terms of inhibitor properties only. In the current study, profound changes are observed in the binding thermodynamics of a drug-resistant variant compared to wild-type HIV-1 protease, irrespective of the inhibitor bound. This variant (Flap+) has a combination of flap and active site mutations and exhibits extremely large entropy-enthalpy compensation compared to wild-type protease, …


Decomposing The Energetic Impact Of Drug-Resistant Mutations: The Example Of Hiv-1 Protease-Drv Binding, Yufeng Cai, Celia Schiffer Oct 2012

Decomposing The Energetic Impact Of Drug-Resistant Mutations: The Example Of Hiv-1 Protease-Drv Binding, Yufeng Cai, Celia Schiffer

Celia A. Schiffer

HIV-1 protease is a major drug target for AIDS therapy. With the appearance of drug-resistant HIV-1 protease variants, understanding the mechanism of drug resistance becomes critical for rational drug design. Computational methods can provide more details about inhibitor-protease binding than crystallography and isothermal titration calorimetry. The latest FDA-approved HIV-1 protease inhibitor is Darunavir (DRV). Herein, each DRV atom is evaluated by free energy component analysis for its contribution to the binding affinity with wild-type protease and ACT, a drug-resistant variant. This information can contribute to the rational design of new HIV-1 protease inhibitors.


Context Surrounding Processing Sites Is Crucial In Determining Cleavage Rate Of A Subset Of Processing Sites In Hiv-1 Gag And Gag-Pro-Pol Polyprotein Precursors By Viral Protease, Sook-Kyung Lee, Marc Potempa, Madhavi Kolli, Aysegul Ozen, Celia Schiffer, Ronald Swanstrom Oct 2012

Context Surrounding Processing Sites Is Crucial In Determining Cleavage Rate Of A Subset Of Processing Sites In Hiv-1 Gag And Gag-Pro-Pol Polyprotein Precursors By Viral Protease, Sook-Kyung Lee, Marc Potempa, Madhavi Kolli, Aysegul Ozen, Celia Schiffer, Ronald Swanstrom

Celia A. Schiffer

Processing of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Gag and Gag-Pro-Pol polyproteins by the HIV-1 protease (PR) is essential for the production of infectious particles. However, the determinants governing the rates of processing of these substrates are not clearly understood. We studied the effect of substrate context on processing by utilizing a novel protease assay in which a substrate containing HIV-1 matrix (MA) and the N-terminal domain of capsid (CA) is labeled with a FlAsH (fluorescein arsenical hairpin) reagent. When the seven cleavage sites within the Gag and Gag-Pro-Pol polyproteins were placed at the MA/CA site, the rates of …


Structural, Kinetic, And Thermodynamic Studies Of Specificity Designed Hiv-1 Protease, Oscar Alvizo, Seema Mittal, Stephen Mayo, Celia Schiffer Oct 2012

Structural, Kinetic, And Thermodynamic Studies Of Specificity Designed Hiv-1 Protease, Oscar Alvizo, Seema Mittal, Stephen Mayo, Celia Schiffer

Celia A. Schiffer

HIV-1 protease recognizes and cleaves more than 12 different substrates leading to viral maturation. While these substrates share no conserved motif, they are specifically selected for and cleaved by protease during viral life cycle. Drug resistant mutations evolve within the protease that compromise inhibitor binding but allow the continued recognition of all these substrates. While the substrate envelope defines a general shape for substrate recognition, successfully predicting the determinants of substrate binding specificity would provide additional insights into the mechanism of altered molecular recognition in resistant proteases. We designed a variant of HIV protease with altered specificity using positive computational …


Design, Synthesis, And Biological And Structural Evaluations Of Novel Hiv-1 Protease Inhibitors To Combat Drug Resistance, Maloy Parai, David Huggins, Hong Cao, Madhavi Nalam, Akbar Ali, Celia Schiffer, Bruce Tidor, Tariq Rana Oct 2012

Design, Synthesis, And Biological And Structural Evaluations Of Novel Hiv-1 Protease Inhibitors To Combat Drug Resistance, Maloy Parai, David Huggins, Hong Cao, Madhavi Nalam, Akbar Ali, Celia Schiffer, Bruce Tidor, Tariq Rana

Celia A. Schiffer

A series of new HIV-1 protease inhibitors (PIs) were designed using a general strategy that combines computational structure-based design with substrate-envelope constraints. The PIs incorporate various alcohol-derived P2 carbamates with acyclic and cyclic heteroatomic functionalities into the (R)-hydroxyethylamine isostere. Most of the new PIs show potent binding affinities against wild-type HIV-1 protease and three multidrug resistant (MDR) variants. In particular, inhibitors containing the 2,2-dichloroacetamide, pyrrolidinone, imidazolidinone, and oxazolidinone moieties at P2 are the most potent with K(i) values in the picomolar range. Several new PIs exhibit nanomolar antiviral potencies against patient-derived wild-type viruses from HIV-1 clades A, B, and C …


Evaluation Of The Substrate Envelope Hypothesis For Inhibitors Of Hiv-1 Protease, Sripriya Chellappan, Visvaldas Kairys, Miguel Fernandes, Celia Schiffer, Michael Gilson Nov 2011

Evaluation Of The Substrate Envelope Hypothesis For Inhibitors Of Hiv-1 Protease, Sripriya Chellappan, Visvaldas Kairys, Miguel Fernandes, Celia Schiffer, Michael Gilson

Celia A. Schiffer

Crystallographic data show that various substrates of HIV protease occupy a remarkably uniform region within the binding site; this region has been termed the substrate envelope. It has been suggested that an inhibitor that fits within the substrate envelope should tend to evade viral resistance because a protease mutation that reduces the affinity of the inhibitor will also tend to reduce the affinity of substrate, and will hence decrease the activity of the enzyme. Accordingly, inhibitors that fit the substrate envelope better should be less susceptible to clinically observed resistant mutations, since these must also allow substrates to bind. The …


Association Of A Novel Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Protease Substrate Cleft Mutation, L23i, With Protease Inhibitor Therapy And In Vitro Drug Resistance, Elizabeth Johnston, Mark Winters, Soo-Yon Rhee, Thomas Merigan, Celia Schiffer, Robert Shafer Nov 2011

Association Of A Novel Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Protease Substrate Cleft Mutation, L23i, With Protease Inhibitor Therapy And In Vitro Drug Resistance, Elizabeth Johnston, Mark Winters, Soo-Yon Rhee, Thomas Merigan, Celia Schiffer, Robert Shafer

Celia A. Schiffer

We observed a previously uncharacterized mutation in the protease substrate cleft, L23I, in 31 of 4,303 persons undergoing human immunodeficiency virus type 1 genotypic resistance testing. In combination with V82I, L23I was associated with a sevenfold reduction in nelfinavir susceptibility and a decrease in replication capacity. In combination with other drug resistance mutations, L23I was associated with multidrug resistance and a compensatory increase in replication capacity.


Co-Evolution Of Nelfinavir-Resistant Hiv-1 Protease And The P1-P6 Substrate, Madhavi Kolli, Stephane Lastere, Celia Schiffer Nov 2011

Co-Evolution Of Nelfinavir-Resistant Hiv-1 Protease And The P1-P6 Substrate, Madhavi Kolli, Stephane Lastere, Celia Schiffer

Celia A. Schiffer

The selective pressure of the competitive protease inhibitors causes both HIV-1 protease and occasionally its substrates to evolve drug resistance. We hypothesize that this occurs particularly in substrates that protrude beyond the substrate envelope and contact residues that mutate in response to a particular protease inhibitor. To validate this hypothesis, we analyzed substrate and protease sequences for covariation. Using the chi2 test, we show a positive correlation between the nelfinavir-resistant D30N/N88D protease mutations and mutations at the p1-p6 cleavage site as compared to the other cleavage sites. Both nelfinavir and the substrate p1-p6 protrude beyond the substrate envelope and contact …


Rationale For More Diverse Inhibitors In Competition With Substrates In Hiv-1 Protease, Nevra Ozer, Celia Schiffer, Turkan Haliloglu Nov 2011

Rationale For More Diverse Inhibitors In Competition With Substrates In Hiv-1 Protease, Nevra Ozer, Celia Schiffer, Turkan Haliloglu

Celia A. Schiffer

The structural fluctuations of HIV-1 protease in interaction with its substrates versus inhibitors were analyzed using the anisotropic network model. The directions of fluctuations in the most cooperative functional modes differ mainly around the dynamically key regions, i.e., the hinge axes, which appear to be more flexible in substrate complexes. The flexibility of HIV-1 protease is likely optimized for the substrates' turnover, resulting in substrate complexes being dynamic. In contrast, in an inhibitor complex, the inhibitor should bind and lock down to inactivate the active site. Protease and ligands are not independent. Substrates are also more flexible than inhibitors and …


Crystal Structure Of The Apobec3g Catalytic Domain Reveals Potential Oligomerization Interfaces., Shivender Shandilya, Madhavi Nalam, Ellen Nalivaika, Phillip Gross, Johnathan Valesano, Keisuke Shindo, Ming Li, Mary Munson, William Royer, Elena Harjes, Takahide Kono, Hiroshi Matsuo, Reuben Harris, Mohan Somasundaran, Celia Schiffer Nov 2011

Crystal Structure Of The Apobec3g Catalytic Domain Reveals Potential Oligomerization Interfaces., Shivender Shandilya, Madhavi Nalam, Ellen Nalivaika, Phillip Gross, Johnathan Valesano, Keisuke Shindo, Ming Li, Mary Munson, William Royer, Elena Harjes, Takahide Kono, Hiroshi Matsuo, Reuben Harris, Mohan Somasundaran, Celia Schiffer

Celia A. Schiffer

APOBEC3G is a DNA cytidine deaminase that has antiviral activity against HIV-1 and other pathogenic viruses. In this study the crystal structure of the catalytically active C-terminal domain was determined to 2.25 A. This structure corroborates features previously observed in nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) studies, a bulge in the second beta strand and a lengthening of the second alpha helix. Oligomerization is postulated to be critical for the function of APOBEC3G. In this structure, four extensive intermolecular interfaces are observed, suggesting potential models for APOBEC3G oligomerization. The structural and functional significance of these interfaces was probed by solution NMR and …


The Challenge Of Developing Robust Drugs To Overcome Resistance, Amy Anderson, Michael Pollastri, Celia Schiffer, Norton Peet Nov 2011

The Challenge Of Developing Robust Drugs To Overcome Resistance, Amy Anderson, Michael Pollastri, Celia Schiffer, Norton Peet

Celia A. Schiffer

Drug resistance is problematic in microbial disease, viral disease and cancer. Understanding at the outset that resistance will impact the effectiveness of any new drug that is developed for these disease categories is imperative. In this Feature, we detail approaches that have been taken with selected drug targets to reduce the susceptibility of new drugs to resistance mechanisms. We will also define the concepts of robust drugs and resilient targets, and discuss how the design of robust drugs and the selection of resilient targets can lead to successful strategies for combating resistance.


How Does A Symmetric Dimer Recognize An Asymmetric Substrate? A Substrate Complex Of Hiv-1 Protease, Moses Prabu-Jeyabalan, Ellen Nalivaika, Celia Schiffer Nov 2011

How Does A Symmetric Dimer Recognize An Asymmetric Substrate? A Substrate Complex Of Hiv-1 Protease, Moses Prabu-Jeyabalan, Ellen Nalivaika, Celia Schiffer

Celia A. Schiffer

The crystal structure of an actual HIV-1 protease-substrate complex is presented at 2.0 A resolution (R-value of 19.7 % (R(free) 23.3 %)) between an inactive variant (D25N) of HIV-1 protease and a long substrate peptide, Lys-Ala-Arg-Val-Leu-Ala-Glu-Ala-Met-Ser, which covers a full binding epitope of capsid(CA)-p2, cleavage site. The substrate peptide is asymmetric in both size and charge distribution. To accommodate this asymmetry the two protease monomers adopt different conformations burying a total of 1038 A(2) of surface area at the protease-substrate interface. The specificity for the CA-p2 substrate peptide is mainly hydrophobic, as most of the hydrogen bonds are made with …


Design Of Hiv-1 Protease Inhibitors Active On Multidrug-Resistant Virus, Dominique Surleraux, Herman De Kock, Wim Verschueren, Geert Pille, Louis Maes, Anik Peeters, Sandrine Vendeville, Sandra De Meyer, Hilde Azijn, Rudi Pauwels, Marie-Pierre De Bethune, Nancy King, Moses Prabu-Jeyabalan, Celia Schiffer, Piet Wigerinck Nov 2011

Design Of Hiv-1 Protease Inhibitors Active On Multidrug-Resistant Virus, Dominique Surleraux, Herman De Kock, Wim Verschueren, Geert Pille, Louis Maes, Anik Peeters, Sandrine Vendeville, Sandra De Meyer, Hilde Azijn, Rudi Pauwels, Marie-Pierre De Bethune, Nancy King, Moses Prabu-Jeyabalan, Celia Schiffer, Piet Wigerinck

Celia A. Schiffer

On the basis of structural data gathered during our ongoing HIV-1 protease inhibitors program, from which our clinical candidate TMC114 9 was selected, we have discovered new series of fused heteroaromatic sulfonamides. The further extension into the P2' region was aimed at identifying new classes of compounds with an improved broad spectrum activity and acceptable pharmacokinetic properties. Several of these compounds display an exceptional broad spectrum activity against a panel of highly cross-resistant mutants. Certain members of these series exhibit favorable pharmacokinetic profiles in rat and dog. Crystal structures and molecular modeling were used to rationalize the broad spectrum profile …


Dynamics Of Preferential Substrate Recognition In Hiv-1 Protease: Redefining The Substrate Envelope, Aysegul Ozen, Turkan Haliloglu, Celia Schiffer Nov 2011

Dynamics Of Preferential Substrate Recognition In Hiv-1 Protease: Redefining The Substrate Envelope, Aysegul Ozen, Turkan Haliloglu, Celia Schiffer

Celia A. Schiffer

Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) protease (PR) permits viral maturation by processing the gag and gag-pro-pol polyproteins. HIV-1 PR inhibitors (PIs) are used in combination antiviral therapy but the emergence of drug resistance has limited their efficacy. The rapid evolution of HIV-1 necessitates consideration of drug resistance in novel drug design. Drug-resistant HIV-1 PR variants no longer inhibited efficiently, continue to hydrolyze the natural viral substrates. Though highly diverse in sequence, the HIV-1 PR substrates bind in a conserved three-dimensional shape we termed the substrate envelope. Earlier, we showed that resistance mutations arise where PIs protrude beyond the substrate …


N88d Facilitates The Co-Occurrence Of D30n And L90m And The Development Of Multidrug Resistance In Hiv Type 1 Protease Following Nelfinavir Treatment Failure, Yumi Mitsuya, Mark Winters, W. Jeffrey Fessel, Soo-Yon Rhee, Leo Hurley, Michael Horberg, Celia Schiffer, Andrew Zolopa, Robert Shafer Nov 2011

N88d Facilitates The Co-Occurrence Of D30n And L90m And The Development Of Multidrug Resistance In Hiv Type 1 Protease Following Nelfinavir Treatment Failure, Yumi Mitsuya, Mark Winters, W. Jeffrey Fessel, Soo-Yon Rhee, Leo Hurley, Michael Horberg, Celia Schiffer, Andrew Zolopa, Robert Shafer

Celia A. Schiffer

Nelfinavir was once one of the most commonly used protease inhibitors (PIs). To investigate the genetic mechanisms of multidrug resistance in protease isolates with the primary nelfinavir resistance mutation D30N, we analyzed patterns of protease mutations in 582 viruses with D30N from 460 persons undergoing HIV-1 genotypic resistance testing at Stanford University Hospital from 1997 to 2005. Three patterns of mutational associations were identified. First, D30N was positively associated with N88D but negatively associated with N88S. Second, D30N and L90M were negatively associated except in the presence of N88D, which facilitated the co-occurrence of D30N and L90M. Third, D30N+N88D+L90M formed …


Tmc310911, A Novel Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Protease Inhibitor, Shows In Vitro An Improved Resistance Profile And Higher Genetic Barrier To Resistance Compared With Current Protease Inhibitors, Inge Dierynck, Herwig Van Marck, Marcia Van Ginderen, Tim Jonckers, Madhavi Nalam, Celia Schiffer, Araz Raoof, Guenter Kraus, Gaston Picchio Nov 2011

Tmc310911, A Novel Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Protease Inhibitor, Shows In Vitro An Improved Resistance Profile And Higher Genetic Barrier To Resistance Compared With Current Protease Inhibitors, Inge Dierynck, Herwig Van Marck, Marcia Van Ginderen, Tim Jonckers, Madhavi Nalam, Celia Schiffer, Araz Raoof, Guenter Kraus, Gaston Picchio

Celia A. Schiffer

TMC310911 is a novel human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) protease inhibitor (PI) structurally closely related to darunavir (DRV) but with improved virological characteristics. TMC310911 has potent activity against wild-type (WT) HIV-1 (median 50% effective concentration [EC(50)], 14 nM) and a wide spectrum of recombinant HIV-1 clinical isolates, including multiple-PI-resistant strains with decreased susceptibility to currently approved PIs (fold change [FC] in EC(50), >10). For a panel of 2,011 recombinant clinical isolates with decreased susceptibility to at least one of the currently approved PIs, the FC in TMC310911 EC(50) was


Design And Synthesis Of Hiv-1 Protease Inhibitors Incorporating Oxazolidinones As P2/P2' Ligands In Pseudosymmetric Dipeptide Isosteres, G. S. Kiran Kumar Reddy, Akbar Ali, Madhavi Nalam, Saima Anjum, Hong Cao, Robin Nathans, Celia Schiffer, Tariq Rana Nov 2011

Design And Synthesis Of Hiv-1 Protease Inhibitors Incorporating Oxazolidinones As P2/P2' Ligands In Pseudosymmetric Dipeptide Isosteres, G. S. Kiran Kumar Reddy, Akbar Ali, Madhavi Nalam, Saima Anjum, Hong Cao, Robin Nathans, Celia Schiffer, Tariq Rana

Celia A. Schiffer

A series of novel HIV-1 protease inhibitors based on two pseudosymmetric dipeptide isosteres have been synthesized and evaluated. The inhibitors were designed by incorporating N-phenyloxazolidinone-5-carboxamides into the hydroxyethylene and (hydroxyethyl)hydrazine dipeptide isosteres as P2 and P2' ligands. Compounds with (S)-phenyloxazolidinones attached at a position proximal to the central hydroxyl group showed low nM inhibitory activities against wild-type HIV-1 protease. Selected compounds were further evaluated for their inhibitory activities against a panel of multidrug-resistant protease variants and for their antiviral potencies in MT-4 cells. The crystal structures of lopinavir (LPV) and two new inhibitors containing phenyloxazolidinone-based ligands in complex with wild-type …


Evaluating The Substrate-Envelope Hypothesis: Structural Analysis Of Novel Hiv-1 Protease Inhibitors Designed To Be Robust Against Drug Resistance, Madhavi Nalam, Akbar Ali, Michael Altman, G. S. Kiran Kumar Reddy, Sripriya Chellappan, Visvaldas Kairys, Aysegul Ozen, Hong Cao, Michael Gilson, Bruce Tidor, Tariq Rana, Celia Schiffer Nov 2011

Evaluating The Substrate-Envelope Hypothesis: Structural Analysis Of Novel Hiv-1 Protease Inhibitors Designed To Be Robust Against Drug Resistance, Madhavi Nalam, Akbar Ali, Michael Altman, G. S. Kiran Kumar Reddy, Sripriya Chellappan, Visvaldas Kairys, Aysegul Ozen, Hong Cao, Michael Gilson, Bruce Tidor, Tariq Rana, Celia Schiffer

Celia A. Schiffer

Drug resistance mutations in HIV-1 protease selectively alter inhibitor binding without significantly affecting substrate recognition and cleavage. This alteration in molecular recognition led us to develop the substrate-envelope hypothesis which predicts that HIV-1 protease inhibitors that fit within the overlapping consensus volume of the substrates are less likely to be susceptible to drug-resistant mutations, as a mutation impacting such inhibitors would simultaneously impact the processing of substrates. To evaluate this hypothesis, over 130 HIV-1 protease inhibitors were designed and synthesized using three different approaches with and without substrate-envelope constraints. A subset of 16 representative inhibitors with binding affinities to wild-type …


Decomposing The Energetic Impact Of Drug Resistant Mutations In Hiv-1 Protease On Binding Drv, Yufeng Cai, Celia Schiffer Nov 2011

Decomposing The Energetic Impact Of Drug Resistant Mutations In Hiv-1 Protease On Binding Drv, Yufeng Cai, Celia Schiffer

Celia A. Schiffer

Darunavir (DRV) is a high affinity (4.5x10(-12) M, DeltaG = -15.2 kcal/mol) HIV-1 protease inhibitor. Two drug-resistant protease variants FLAP+ (L10I, G48V, I54V, V82A) and ACT (V82T, I84V) decrease the binding affinity with DRV by 1.0 kcal/mol and 1.6 kcal/mol respectively. In this study the absolute and relative binding free energies of DRV with wild-type protease, FLAP+ and ACT were calculated with MM-PB/GBSA and thermodynamic integration methods, respectively. Free energy decomposition elucidated that the mutations conferred resistance by distorting the active site of HIV-1 protease so that the residues that lost binding free energy were not limited to the sites …


Replacement Of The P1 Amino Acid Of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Gag Processing Sites Can Inhibit Or Enhance The Rate Of Cleavage By The Viral Protease, Steve Pettit, Gavin Henderson, Celia Schiffer, Ronald Swanstrom Nov 2011

Replacement Of The P1 Amino Acid Of Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Gag Processing Sites Can Inhibit Or Enhance The Rate Of Cleavage By The Viral Protease, Steve Pettit, Gavin Henderson, Celia Schiffer, Ronald Swanstrom

Celia A. Schiffer

Processing of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) Gag precursor is highly regulated, with differential rates of cleavage at the five major processing sites to give characteristic processing intermediates. We examined the role of the P1 amino acid in determining the rate of cleavage at each of these five sites by using libraries of mutants generated by site-directed mutagenesis. Between 12 and 17 substitution mutants were tested at each P1 position in Gag, using recombinant HIV-1 protease (PR) in an in vitro processing reaction of radiolabeled Gag substrate. There were three sites in Gag (MA/CA, CA/p2, NC/p1) where one …


Hiv-1 Protease Inhibitors From Inverse Design In The Substrate Envelope Exhibit Subnanomolar Binding To Drug-Resistant Variants, Michael Altman, Akbar Ali, G. S. Kiran Kumar Reddy, Madhavi Nalam, Saima Anjum, Hong Cao, Sripriya Chellappan, Visvaldas Kairys, Miguel Fernandes, Michael Gilson, Celia Schiffer, Tariq Rana, Bruce Tidor Nov 2011

Hiv-1 Protease Inhibitors From Inverse Design In The Substrate Envelope Exhibit Subnanomolar Binding To Drug-Resistant Variants, Michael Altman, Akbar Ali, G. S. Kiran Kumar Reddy, Madhavi Nalam, Saima Anjum, Hong Cao, Sripriya Chellappan, Visvaldas Kairys, Miguel Fernandes, Michael Gilson, Celia Schiffer, Tariq Rana, Bruce Tidor

Celia A. Schiffer

The acquisition of drug-resistant mutations by infectious pathogens remains a pressing health concern, and the development of strategies to combat this threat is a priority. Here we have applied a general strategy, inverse design using the substrate envelope, to develop inhibitors of HIV-1 protease. Structure-based computation was used to design inhibitors predicted to stay within a consensus substrate volume in the binding site. Two rounds of design, synthesis, experimental testing, and structural analysis were carried out, resulting in a total of 51 compounds. Improvements in design methodology led to a roughly 1000-fold affinity enhancement to a wild-type protease for the …


Structural And Thermodynamic Basis For The Binding Of Tmc114, A Next-Generation Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Protease Inhibitor, Nancy King, Moses Prabu-Jeyabalan, Ellen Nalivaika, Piet Wigerinck, Marie-Pierre De Bethune, Celia Schiffer Nov 2011

Structural And Thermodynamic Basis For The Binding Of Tmc114, A Next-Generation Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Protease Inhibitor, Nancy King, Moses Prabu-Jeyabalan, Ellen Nalivaika, Piet Wigerinck, Marie-Pierre De Bethune, Celia Schiffer

Celia A. Schiffer

TMC114, a newly designed human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) protease inhibitor, is extremely potent against both wild-type (wt) and multidrug-resistant (MDR) viruses in vitro as well as in vivo. Although chemically similar to amprenavir (APV), the potency of TMC114 is substantially greater. To examine the basis for this potency, we solved crystal structures of TMC114 complexed with wt HIV-1 protease and TMC114 and APV complexed with an MDR (L63P, V82T, and I84V) protease variant. In addition, we determined the corresponding binding thermodynamics by isothermal titration calorimetry. TMC114 binds approximately 2 orders of magnitude more tightly to the wt enzyme …


The Effect Of Clade-Specific Sequence Polymorphisms On Hiv-1 Protease Activity And Inhibitor Resistance Pathways, Rajintha Bandaranayake, Madhavi Kolli, Nancy King, Ellen Nalivaika, Annie Heroux, Junko Kakizawa, Wataru Sugiura, Celia Schiffer Nov 2011

The Effect Of Clade-Specific Sequence Polymorphisms On Hiv-1 Protease Activity And Inhibitor Resistance Pathways, Rajintha Bandaranayake, Madhavi Kolli, Nancy King, Ellen Nalivaika, Annie Heroux, Junko Kakizawa, Wataru Sugiura, Celia Schiffer

Celia A. Schiffer

The majority of HIV-1 infections around the world result from non-B clade HIV-1 strains. The CRF01_AE (AE) strain is seen principally in Southeast Asia. AE protease differs by approximately 10% in amino acid sequence from clade B protease and carries several naturally occurring polymorphisms that are associated with drug resistance in clade B. AE protease has been observed to develop resistance through a nonactive-site N88S mutation in response to nelfinavir (NFV) therapy, whereas clade B protease develops both the active-site mutation D30N and the nonactive-site mutation N88D. Structural and biochemical studies were carried out with wild-type and NFV-resistant clade B …


Lack Of Synergy For Inhibitors Targeting A Multi-Drug-Resistant Hiv-1 Protease, Nancy King, Laurence Melnick, Moses Prabu-Jeyabalan, Ellen Nalivaika, Shiow-Shong Yang, Yun Gao, Xiaoyi Nie, Charles Zepp, Donald Heefner, Celia Schiffer Nov 2011

Lack Of Synergy For Inhibitors Targeting A Multi-Drug-Resistant Hiv-1 Protease, Nancy King, Laurence Melnick, Moses Prabu-Jeyabalan, Ellen Nalivaika, Shiow-Shong Yang, Yun Gao, Xiaoyi Nie, Charles Zepp, Donald Heefner, Celia Schiffer

Celia A. Schiffer

The three-dimensional structures of indinavir and three newly synthesized indinavir analogs in complex with a multi-drug-resistant variant (L63P, V82T, I84V) of HIV-1 protease were determined to approximately 2.2 A resolution. Two of the three analogs have only a single modification of indinavir, and their binding affinities to the variant HIV-1 protease are enhanced over that of indinavir. However, when both modifications were combined into a single compound, the binding affinity to the protease variant was reduced. On close examination, the structural rearrangements in the protease that occur in the tightest binding inhibitor complex are mutually exclusive with the structural rearrangements …


Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Protease-Correlated Cleavage Site Mutations Enhance Inhibitor Resistance, Madhavi Kolli, Eric Stawiski, Colombe Chappey, Celia Schiffer Nov 2011

Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Protease-Correlated Cleavage Site Mutations Enhance Inhibitor Resistance, Madhavi Kolli, Eric Stawiski, Colombe Chappey, Celia Schiffer

Celia A. Schiffer

Drug resistance is an important cause of antiretroviral therapy failure in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients. Mutations in the protease render the virus resistant to protease inhibitors (PIs). Gag cleavage sites also mutate, sometimes correlating with resistance mutations in the protease, but their contribution to resistance has not been systematically analyzed. The present study examines mutations in Gag cleavage sites that associate with protease mutations and the impact of these associations on drug susceptibilities. Significant associations were observed between mutations in the nucleocapsid-p1 (NC-p1) and p1-p6 cleavage sites and various PI resistance-associated mutations in the protease. Several patterns were frequently …


Three Residues In Hiv-1 Matrix Contribute To Protease Inhibitor Susceptibility And Replication Capacity, Chris Parry, Madhavi Kolli, Richard Myers, Patricia Cane, Celia Schiffer, Deenan Pillay Nov 2011

Three Residues In Hiv-1 Matrix Contribute To Protease Inhibitor Susceptibility And Replication Capacity, Chris Parry, Madhavi Kolli, Richard Myers, Patricia Cane, Celia Schiffer, Deenan Pillay

Celia A. Schiffer

Other than cleavage site mutations, there is little data on specific positions within Gag that impact on HIV protease inhibitor susceptibility. We have recently shown that non-cleavage site mutations in gag, particularly within matrix protein can restore replication capacity and further reduce protease inhibitor drug susceptibility when coexpressed with a drug-resistant (mutant) protease. The matrix protein of this patient-derived virus was studied in order to identify specific changes responsible for this phenotype. Three amino acid changes in matrix (R76K, Y79F, and T81A) had an impact on replication capacity as well as drug susceptibility. Introduction of these three changes into wild-type …