Cooperative Effects of
Drug-Resistance Mutations in
the Flap Region of HIV‑1 Protease
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Abstract
Understanding the interdependence of multiple mutations
in conferring
drug resistance is crucial to the development of novel and robust
inhibitors. As HIV-1 protease continues to adapt and evade inhibitors
while still maintaining the ability to specifically recognize and
efficiently cleave its substrates, the problem of drug resistance
has become more complicated. Under the selective pressure of therapy,
correlated mutations accumulate throughout the enzyme to compromise
inhibitor binding, but characterizing their energetic interdependency
is not straightforward. A particular drug resistant variant (L10I/G48V/I54V/V82A)
displays extreme entropy–enthalpy compensation relative to
wild-type enzyme but a similar variant (L10I/G48V/I54A/V82A) does
not. Individual mutations of sites in the flaps (residues 48 and 54)
of the enzyme reveal that the thermodynamic effects are not additive.
Rather, the thermodynamic profile of the variants is interdependent
on the cooperative effects exerted by a particular combination of
mutations simultaneously present