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A Compensatory Mutation Provides Resistance to Disparate HIV Fusion Inhibitor Peptides and Enhances Membrane Fusion
Authors
A Adachi
A Cole
+40 more
A Cole
A Cole
Alan J. Waring
Alexander M. Cole
AM Barrio
AM Cole
Amy L. Cole
C Baldwin
C Baldwin
C Fuhrman
CR Eade
CT Wild
D Chan
D Eggink
E Micewicz
E Poveda
G Melikyan
GB Fields
J Kimpton
J Reeves
K Miyauchi
L Furci
Lisa C. Rohan
LJ Reed
M Caffrey
Matthew P. Wood
N Ray
Patrick M. Tarwater
Phalguni Gupta
Piotr Ruchala
Preston Marx
RP Lamers
S Gallo
S Owen
Shan-Lu Liu
T Chang
VD Trivedi
X Wei
Y He
Z Liu
Publication date
1 January 2013
Publisher
'Public Library of Science (PLoS)'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
Fusion inhibitors are a class of antiretroviral drugs used to prevent entry of HIV into host cells. Many of the fusion inhibitors being developed, including the drug enfuvirtide, are peptides designed to competitively inhibit the viral fusion protein gp41. With the emergence of drug resistance, there is an increased need for effective and unique alternatives within this class of antivirals. One such alternative is a class of cyclic, cationic, antimicrobial peptides known as θ-defensins, which are produced by many non-human primates and exhibit broad-spectrum antiviral and antibacterial activity. Currently, the θ-defensin analog RC-101 is being developed as a microbicide due to its specific antiviral activity, lack of toxicity to cells and tissues, and safety in animals. Understanding potential RC-101 resistance, and how resistance to other fusion inhibitors affects RC-101 susceptibility, is critical for future development. In previous studies, we identified a mutant, R5-tropic virus that had evolved partial resistance to RC-101 during in vitro selection. Here, we report that a secondary mutation in gp41 was found to restore replicative fitness, membrane fusion, and the rate of viral entry, which were compromised by an initial mutation providing partial RC-101 resistance. Interestingly, we show that RC-101 is effective against two enfuvirtide-resistant mutants, demonstrating the clinical importance of RC-101 as a unique fusion inhibitor. These findings both expand our understanding of HIV drug-resistance to diverse peptide fusion inhibitors and emphasize the significance of compensatory gp41 mutations. © 2013 Wood et al
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