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Evaluation of a System to Screen for Stimulators of Non-Specific DNA Nicking by HIV-1 Integrase: Application to a Library of 50,000 Compounds
Author(s) -
Malgorzata Sudol,
Jennifer L. Fritz,
Melissa Tran,
Gavin P. Robertson,
Julie B. Ealy,
Michael Katzman
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
antiviral chemistry and chemotherapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2040-2066
pISSN - 0956-3202
DOI - 10.3851/imp1857
Subject(s) - integrase , integrases , endonuclease , integrase inhibitor , dna , high throughput screening , biology , mutant , computational biology , virology , human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) , biochemistry , gene , viral load , antiretroviral therapy
Background: In addition to activities needed to catalyse integration, retroviral integrases exhibit non-specific endonuclease activity that is enhanced by certain small compounds, suggesting that integrase could be stimulated to damage viral DNA before integration occurs.Methods: A non-radioactive, plate-based, solution phase, fluorescence assay was used to screen a library of 50,080 drug-like chemicals for stimulation of non-specific DNA nicking by HIV-1 integrase.Results: A semi-automated workflow was established and primary hits were readily identified from a graphic output. Overall, 0.6% of the chemicals caused a large increase in fluorescence (the primary hit rate) without also having visible colour that could have artifactually caused this result. None of the potential stimulators from this moderate-size library, however, passed a secondary test that included an inactive integrase mutant that assessed whether the increased fluorescence depended on the endonuclease activity of integrase.Conclusions: This first attempt at identifying integrase stimulator compounds establishes the necessary logistics and workflow required. The results from this study should encourage larger scale high-throughput screening to advance the novel antiviral strategy of stimulating integrase to damage retroviral DNA.

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