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A Novel Substrate-Based HIV-1 Protease Inhibitor Drug Resistance Mechanism
Author(s) -
Monique Nijhuis,
Noortje M van Maarseveen,
Stéphane Lastère,
P Schipper,
Eoin Coakley,
Bärbel Glass,
Mirka Rovenska,
Dorien de Jong,
Colombe Chappey,
Irma W Goedegebuure,
Gabrielle Heilek-Snyder,
Dominic Dulude,
Nick Cammack,
Léa BrakierGingras,
Jan Konvalinka,
Neil Parkin,
HansGeorg Kräusslich,
Françoise BrunVézinet,
Charles A. Boucher
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
plos medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.847
H-Index - 228
eISSN - 1549-1676
pISSN - 1549-1277
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pmed.0040036
Subject(s) - protease , biology , drug resistance , virology , protease inhibitor (pharmacology) , virus , cleavage (geology) , mutation , hiv 1 protease , genetics , viral load , enzyme , gene , biochemistry , antiretroviral therapy , fracture (geology) , paleontology
Background HIV protease inhibitor (PI) therapy results in the rapid selection of drug resistant viral variants harbouring one or two substitutions in the viral protease. To combat PI resistance development, two approaches have been developed. The first is to increase the level of PI in the plasma of the patient, and the second is to develop novel PI with high potency against the known PI-resistant HIV protease variants. Both approaches share the requirement for a considerable increase in the number of protease mutations to lead to clinical resistance, thereby increasing the genetic barrier. We investigated whether HIV could yet again find a way to become less susceptible to these novel inhibitors. Methods and Findings We have performed in vitro selection experiments using a novel PI with an increased genetic barrier (RO033-4649) and demonstrated selection of three viruses 4- to 8-fold resistant to all PI compared to wild type. These PI-resistant viruses did not have a single substitution in the viral protease. Full genomic sequencing revealed the presence of NC/p1 cleavage site substitutions in the viral Gag polyprotein (K436E and/or I437T/V) in all three resistant viruses. These changes, when introduced in a reference strain, conferred PI resistance. The mechanism leading to PI resistance is enhancement of the processing efficiency of the altered substrate by wild-type protease. Analysis of genotypic and phenotypic resistance profiles of 28,000 clinical isolates demonstrated the presence of these NC/p1 cleavage site mutations in some clinical samples (codon 431 substitutions in 13%, codon 436 substitutions in 8%, and codon 437 substitutions in 10%). Moreover, these cleavage site substitutions were highly significantly associated with reduced susceptibility to PI in clinical isolates lacking primary protease mutations. Furthermore, we used data from a clinical trial (NARVAL, ANRS 088) to demonstrate that these NC/p1 cleavage site changes are associated with virological failure during PI therapy. Conclusions HIV can use an alternative mechanism to become resistant to PI by changing the substrate instead of the protease. Further studies are required to determine to what extent cleavage site mutations may explain virological failure during PI therapy.

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