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HIV-1 Reverse Transcriptase: Drug Resistance Mechanisms HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI–Frederick HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick Steps of DNA Polymerization RT RT/DNA thumb DNAn E RT/DNA/dNTP fingers PPi dNTP E´/DNAn DNA binding E´/DNAn/dNTP dNTP binding E*/DNAn/dNTP Conformational change/ catalysis E´/DNAn+1 E + DNA Translocation HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick Sarafianos et al. (1999) Chem. & Biol. 6, R137-R145 Nucleoside Analogs and Nonnucleoside RT Inhibitors • Nucleoside analogs (NRTIs) that are used to treat HIV-1 infections all lack the normal 3’ OH and act as chain terminators when incorporated into viral DNA • Nonnucleoside RT inhibitors (NNRTIs) bind to HIV-1 RT near, but not at, the polymerase active site distorting the enzyme and blocking the chemical step of viral DNA synthesis HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick Drug Binding Sites in HIV-1 RT NRTI NNRTI HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick Sites of Drug Resistance Mutations in HIV-1 RT NNRTI resistance mutation sites NRTI resistance mutation sites HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick Nonnucleoside RT Resistance Mechanisms • Mutations that reduce the interactions between RT and the bound drug (Y181C, Y188L). • Mutations that cause steric hindrance with the bound drug (G190A/S). • Mutation that makes it more difficult for the NNRTI to enter the binding pocket (K103N). • Indirect effects (L100I, V106A, V108A). HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick NRTI Resistance • Resistance to nucleoside analogs (NRTIs) implies that the mutant reverse transcriptase (RT) has an enhanced ability to discriminate between the NRTI and the normal dNTPs. • This discrimination can occur if the NRTI is incorporated less efficiently (exclusion) or by enhanced excision of the NRTI after it has been incorporated (ATP-dependent pyrophosphorolysis). HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick NRTI Resistance Mechanisms • Exclusion: M184V, 3TC/FTC resistance; steric hinderance • Exclusion: K65R, Q151M resistance to multiple NRTIs, altered interactions with the 3’OH of the incoming dNTP • Excision: TAMs (T215F/Y and friends) cause AZT resistance by enhanced ATP binding • Fingers insertions: extend TAMs to cause excision of many NRTIs HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick Steric Hindrance in 3TC Resistance HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick AZT Resistance (Excision) • Excision involves pyrophosphorolysis (the reverse of polymerization). • AZT-resistant RTs preferentially excise AZTMP. • AZT-resistance mutations enhance the ability of RT to bind ATP, the in vivo pyrophosphate donor. • AZT is excised easily because the long azido group interferes with translocation: an AZT terminated primer preferentially resides at the N (active) site where it can be excised HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick Polymerization HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick Closed Complex Reduces Excision Stable Complex No Excision b3-b4 Loop HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick AZTMP Excision Unstable Complex Excision AZT MP b3-b4 Loop * * ATP Binding Mutations HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick Y183 primer template D186 P M184 Y115 D185 D110 AZTMP g b K219E N D67N fingers a D113 T215Y K70R ATP M41L An AZT Terminated Primer in the P Site Causes Steric Hindrance with a dNTP in the N site P Site (AZTMP) N Site (dNTP) Active Site HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick AZT Resistance: Q151M • Certain NRTI combination therapies (AZT + ddI + ddC) select Q151M in HIV-1 RT. However, Q151M appears in only 5% of the treated HIV-1 patients. • There is less data (fewer treated patients) but HIV-2 prefers to use the Q151M pathway for AZT resistance • In HIV-1 (but not HIV-2) the Q151Mutation is usually accompanied by additional mutations • Why does HIV-1 predominantly use an ATP-dependent excision pathway (T215Y/F) while HIV-2 predominantly uses an AZT exclusion pathway (Q151M)? HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick AZTTP Inhibition of Polymerization of HIV-1RT, HIV-2 RT, and Their Q151M Mutants HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick HIV-1 RT (WT and Mutants) Are Better at AZTMP Excision than HIV-2 RT (WT and Mutants) HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick ATP Binding sites in HIV-1 RT and HIV-2 RT P 185 215 112 215 214 ATP 113 115 112 214 ATP 118 117 113 44 1 4 2 46 5 41 4 115 116 116 117 211 AZTMP AZTMP N 209 P 185 41 44 46 3 HIV-1 RT HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick HIV-2 RT N HIV-1 and HIV-2 AZT Resistance • Each virus prefers a resistance pathway that is best suited to extend the properties of their respective wild-type RTs. • Viewed in this light, the ability of HIV-1 to develop AZT (and multi-NRTI) resistance using ATP-mediated excision is an unfortunate coincidence based on the existence of a nascent ATP binding site that appears to have no normal function. HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick Delayed Chain Terminators • HIV-1 excision works efficiently because the NRTI remains at the end of the primer strand where it can be excised. • Delayed chain terminators block DNA synthesis several nucleotides after they have been incorporated. • As expected, delayed chain terminators block the excision reaction and inhibit the growth of viruses that replicate using excision proficient RTs. HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick Conclusions • There are a number of distinct mechanisms for NRTI and NNRTI resistance. • Resistance mechanisms evolve as logical extensions of the properties of wild type RT. • Understanding the mechanism(s) of RT resistance makes it possible to develop strategies (and drugs) that counteract these mechanisms . HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick Acknowledgments NCI-Frederick Paul L. Boyer Pat Clark John Julias CABM/Rutgers Stefan Sarafianos* Kalyan Das Eddy Arnold Victor Marquez Tel Aviv Amnon Hizi HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick North-Methanocarbathymidine (N-MCT) HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick N-MCdATP Is a Delayed Chain Terminator T HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick N-MCT Inhibits HIV-1 Viruses that Replicate Using Excision-Proficient RTs in HSV TK+ Cells WT AZT-R SSGR/T215Y Δ67 Complex Relative Infectivity 100 80 60 40 20 0 0 HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick 0.05 0.1 µM North-MCT 0.5 HIV Infection/Mortality • Over 3 million deaths in 2003; about 7 per minute • 40-50 million infected worldwide • In 2003, about 5 million new infections, mostly in Africa, South and Southeast Asia • About 1 million already infected in the US; about 45,000 new infections and 15,000 deaths in 2003 HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick HIV Evolution • HIV replication is error prone: Error rate ca. 1 per genome per replication cycle • The rapid replication of the virus, together with the error rate and high viral load causes the virus to evolve rapidly • The rapid evolution of the virus makes the problems of vaccine development and drug therapy particularly difficult HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick Anti-HIV Drugs and Drug Targets • • • • Target should be essential and conserved; enzymes are better targets (RT, PR, IN) HIV develops resistance to all drugs RT has at least two separate drug targets (there may be more); PR and IN have one Understand resistance; develop drugs that are effective against resistant viruses HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick Anti-HIV Drugs and Drug Resistance • Drugs do not cure an HIV infection • Drugs need to be taken (regularly) for the life of the patient • For drugs to be effective replication must be blocked completely (stop evolution of resistance) • It takes at least three drugs in combination to fully block viral replication/evolution HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick Retroviral Life Cycle HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick Mechanism of K103N Resistance Rigid inhibitor Steric hindrance Flexible inhibitor Torsional changes (wiggling) Reorientation and repositioning (jiggling) Subdomains of the Subunits of HIV-1 RT HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick Two NRTI Drug Resistance Paradigms: Reduced Incorporation and Enhanced Excision HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick M814V Causes Steric Hindrance with 3TCTP Clash Between Incorporated AZT and Active Site Aspartic Acid Prevents Translocation HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick WT Complex N superposed on WT Complex P template primer P site D186 D185 AZTMP D110 N site AZTMP Q151 R72 fingers P site Primer (priming site) dNTP 3’OH N site (nucleotide binding site) a Catalytic carboxylates b g Released as pyrophosphate Y183 primer template D186 P M184 Y115 D185 D110 N AZTMP g b D67N fingers K219E D113 T215Y K70R PPi M41L NRTI Excision Unstable Complex Excision b3-b4 Loop Fingers Mutations * * ATP Binding Mutations HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick Excision/Extension Assay +ATP, dNTPs, NRTITPs HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick HIV-1 RT and HIV-2 RT Sequences HIV-1 (BH10) HIV-2 (ROD) ---PGIRYQYNVLPQGWKGSPAIFQ--|| || | |||||||||||||| ---PGKRYIYKVLPQGWKGSPAIFQ--151 ---IYQYMDDLYVGSDLEIGQHRTKIEELRQHLLRWGLTTPDKKHQKEPP--— | |||||• ••|| | • |• | | •||| | ||•|| ---IIQYMDDILIASDRTDLEHDRVVLQLKELLNGLGFSTPDEKFQKDPP--185 215 219 HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick ATP-Mediated AZTMP Excision/Extension Deblock and Extend 100 uM each dNTP vary ATP HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick PPi-Mediated AZTMP Excision/Extension Deblock and extend 100 uM each dNTP vary PPi HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick Q151 in HIV-1 and HIV-2 RT 74 115 151 73 HIV-1 /DNA/dNTP HIV-1 116 HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick HIV-2 Template Sequence Affects Delayed Chain Termination HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick Relative Infectivity North and South MCT Block HIV Replication in HSV-TK+ Cells 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 N-MCT S-MCT AZT 0 0.1 µM Drug HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick 1 10 North-Methanocarbathymidine (N-MCT) A-form DNA HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick South-Methanocarbathymidine (S-MCT) B-form DNA AZT Excision/Extension WT D67 Complex AZT-R HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick 100.0 µM each dNTP 10.0 µM AZTTP PMPA Excision/Extension 100.0 µM each dNTP 10.0 µM PMPA PP, WT D67 Complex AZT-R HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick ATP-Mediated Excision of N-MCTMP N-MCTMP Blocked Primer 10 mM each dNTP HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick N-MCdAMP Inhibits AZT-R RT Excision Simplified Excision/ Extension Assay 3´ MC-dAMP + dNTPs, ATP HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick N Site AZTMP Complex Compared to the Ternary Complex P site AZTMP D185 D186 dNTP ~2.5 Å D110 HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick N site Q151 P Site Complex Compared to Binary Complex primer P site N site D185 D110 HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick thumb template primer K103N dNTP L74I D67 NNRTI Binding Pocket b fingers g T69G palm K219Q K70R M41L T215Y ATP Binding Pocket HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick AA219 in HIV-1 RT and HIV-2 RT Q151 in HIV-1 and HIV-2 RT 186 HIV-1/DNA/dTTP 185 HIV-1/DNA/TNV-DP TNV-DP 219 HIV-2 unliganded HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick AA214 in HIV-1 RT and HIV-2 RT 110 185 219 HIV-1 HIV-2 115 116 214 215 N-ter N-ter HIV Drug Resistance Program NCI-Frederick