Abstract

The HIV-1 protease is a major target of inhibitor drugs in AIDS therapies. The therapies are impaired by mutations of the HIV-1 protease that can lead to resistance to protease inhibitors. These mutations are classified into major mutations, which usually occur first and clearly reduce the susceptibility to protease inhibitors, and minor, accessory mutations that occur later and individually do not substantially affect the susceptibility to inhibitors. Major mutations are predominantly located in the active site of the HIV-1 protease and can directly interfere with inhibitor binding. Minor mutations, in contrast, are typically located distal to the active site. A central question is how these distal mutations contribute to resistance development. In this article, we present a systematic computational investigation of stability changes caused by major and minor mutations of the HIV-1 protease. As most small single-domain proteins, the HIV-1 protease is only marginally stable. Mutations that destabilize the folded, active state of the protease therefore can shift the conformational equilibrium towards the unfolded, inactive state. We find that the most frequent major mutations destabilize the HIV-1 protease, whereas roughly half of the frequent minor mutations are stabilizing. An analysis of protease sequences from patients in treatment indicates that the stabilizing minor mutations are frequently correlated with destabilizing major mutations, and that highly resistant HIV-1 proteases exhibit significant fractions of stabilizing mutations. Our results thus indicate a central role of minor mutations in balancing the marginal stability of the protease against the destabilization induced by the most frequent major mutations.

Highlights

  • The HIV-1 protease plays an essential role in HIV replication by cleaving newly synthesized polyprotein chains at several places into functional protein components of the virus

  • The cleavage of the polyprotein chain occurs at a tunnel-shaped active site enclosed by the two identical chains of the dimeric HIV-1 protease.[1,2]

  • Because of its essential role for HIV replication, the HIV-1 protease is a major target in AIDS therapy

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Summary

Introduction

The HIV-1 protease plays an essential role in HIV replication by cleaving newly synthesized polyprotein chains at several places into functional protein components of the virus. The cleavage of the polyprotein chain occurs at a tunnel-shaped active site enclosed by the two identical chains of the dimeric HIV-1 protease.[1,2] In its unbound state, the HIV-1 protease adopts a semiopen conformation that enables the entry of the polyprotein chain into the active-site tunnel. The binding of the polyprotein substrate induces a change to the closed conformation of the protease in which substrate cleavage occurs.[3,4] Because of its essential role for HIV replication, the HIV-1 protease is a major target in AIDS therapy. Nine drugs approved for highly active antiretroviral therapies are inhibitors of the HIV-1 protease.[1,5]

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