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Mechanism of allosteric inhibition of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase revealed by single-molecule and ensemble fluorescence
Author(s) -
Grant D. Schauer,
Kelly Huber,
Sanford H. Leuba,
Nicolas SluisCremer
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gku819
Subject(s) - biology , reverse transcriptase , efavirenz , allosteric regulation , mechanism of action , primer (cosmetics) , biophysics , polymerase , salt bridge , in vivo , conformational change , in vitro , biochemistry , enzyme , microbiology and biotechnology , mutant , virology , human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) , genetics , chemistry , rna , organic chemistry , gene , antiretroviral therapy , viral load
Non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase (RT) inhibitors (NNRTIs) are routinely used to treat HIV-1 infection, yet their mechanism of action remains unclear despite intensive investigation. In this study, we developed complementary single-molecule fluorescence and ensemble fluorescence anisotropy approaches to discover how NNRTIs modulate the intra-molecular conformational changes and inter-molecular dynamics of RT-template/primer (T/P) and RT-T/P-dNTP complexes. We found that NNRTI binding to RT induces opening of the fingers and thumb subdomains, which increases the dynamic sliding motion of the enzyme on the T/P and reduces dNTP binding affinity. Further, efavirenz promotes formation of the E138-K101 salt bridge between the p51 and p66 subunits of RT, which contributes to opening of the thumb/fingers subdomains. Engineering a more polar salt bridge between p51 and p66 resulted in even greater increases in the thumb/fingers opening, RT sliding, dNTP binding disruption and in vitro and in vivo RT inhibition than were observed with wild-type RT. We also observed that K103N, a clinically relevant NNRTI resistance mutation, does not prevent binding between efavirenz and RT-T/P but instead allows formation of a stable and productive RT-T/P-dNTP complex, possibly through disruption of the E138-K101 salt bridge. Collectively, these data describe unique structure-activity-resistance relationships that could be exploited for drug development.

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