Abstract

HIV-2 protease (PR2) is a homodimer targeted by drugs in the treatment of HIV-2 infections. This dimer is often considered symmetric. However, exploration of crystallographic structures showed that the two chains of PR2 exhibit different conformations. This study presents the first analysis of the structural asymmetry of PR2 induced by its intrinsic flexibility. We followed the structural asymmetry of PR2 throughout a molecular dynamics (MD) simulation of 1 microsecond. To do so, we quantified the global and local structural asymmetries of 1001 structures extracted from the MD simulation using the root mean square deviation (RMSD) between the two chains in each structure. We then analyzed the links between global and local asymmetry and PR2 flexibility. Our results showed that the global asymmetry of PR2 evolves over time and that it is not explained by the asymmetry of only one region of PR2. We noted that the most flexible regions of PR2 are the most asymmetric regions, revealing that the structural asymmetry of a region is induced by its intrinsic flexibility. Using multivariate analysis methods, we identified six asymmetric profiles varying from structures exhibiting weak asymmetry to structures with extreme asymmetry in at least eight different regions. The analysis of transitions between the different profiles in the MD simulation showed that two consecutive structures often exhibit similar asymmetric profiles, revealing small deformations. To conclude, this study provides insights which help to better understand PR2’s structure, dynamics, and deformations.

Highlights

  • Protease (PR) is an important target for the treatment of HIV-1 and HIV-2 infections because of its central role in the maturation of the virus [1]

  • An molecular dynamics (MD) simulation of one μs using the 3EBZ (PDB code) structure was employed to explore the structural asymmetry of PR2 induced by its intrinsic flexibility

  • To explore the conformational landscape sampled by MD structures, we computed the backbone root mean square deviation (RMSD) computed among all MD structures and the 19 crystallographic structures

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Summary

Introduction

Protease (PR) is an important target for the treatment of HIV-1 and HIV-2 infections because of its central role in the maturation of the virus [1]. It carries out the proteolytic cleavage of different peptide precursors, which allows the production of both structural and functional proteins that are necessary and indispensable for the formation of new viruses. The catalytic-site region, which contains the active site of PR, is bordered by two loops (one on each monomer) named the wall region. The flap region is bordered by the elbow and cantilever regions. The other four regions, named r1, r2, r3, and r4, correspond to loops connecting the structural or functional regions

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