Study on suitable analysis method for HIV-1 non-catalytic integrase inhibitor

Abstract Background Integrase (IN) is an essential protein for HIV replication that catalyzes insertion of the reverse-transcribed viral genome into the host chromosome during the early steps of viral infection. Highly active anti-retroviral therapy is a HIV/AIDS treatment method that combines three...

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Main Authors: Ki Hoon Park, Minjee Kim, Seoung Eun Bae, Hee Jung Lee, Kyung-Chang Kim, Byeong Sun Choi, Young Bong Kim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-01-01
Series:Virology Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12985-020-01476-x
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spelling doaj-7a8740f78e534ff1b92c7bffd3fc4ab52021-01-17T12:25:38ZengBMCVirology Journal1743-422X2021-01-011811910.1186/s12985-020-01476-xStudy on suitable analysis method for HIV-1 non-catalytic integrase inhibitorKi Hoon Park0Minjee Kim1Seoung Eun Bae2Hee Jung Lee3Kyung-Chang Kim4Byeong Sun Choi5Young Bong Kim6Department of Bio-Industrial Technologies, College of Animal Bioscience and Technology, Konkuk UniversityDepartment of Biomedical Science and Engineering, College of Animal Bioscience and Technology, Konkuk UniversityDepartment of Biomedical Science and Engineering, College of Animal Bioscience and Technology, Konkuk UniversityDepartment of Biomedical Science and Engineering, College of Animal Bioscience and Technology, Konkuk UniversityDivision of AIDS, Center for Immunology and Pathology, Korea National Institute of HealthDivision of AIDS, Center for Immunology and Pathology, Korea National Institute of HealthDepartment of Bio-Industrial Technologies, College of Animal Bioscience and Technology, Konkuk UniversityAbstract Background Integrase (IN) is an essential protein for HIV replication that catalyzes insertion of the reverse-transcribed viral genome into the host chromosome during the early steps of viral infection. Highly active anti-retroviral therapy is a HIV/AIDS treatment method that combines three or more antiviral drugs often formulated from compounds that inhibit the activities of viral reverse transcriptase and protease enzymes. Early IN inhibitors (INIs) mainly serve as integrase strand transfer inhibitors (INSTI) that disrupt strand transfer by binding the catalytic core domain of IN. However, mutations of IN can confer resistance to INSTI. Therefore, non-catalytic integrase inhibitors (NCINI) have been developed as next-generation INIs. Methods In this study, we evaluated and compared the activity of INSTI and NCINI according to the analysis method. Antiviral activity was compared using p24 ELISA with MT2 cell and TZM-bl luciferase system with TZM-bl cell. Each drug was serially diluted and treated to MT2 and TZM-b1 cells, infected with HIV-1 AD8 strain and incubated for 5 and 2 days, respectively. Additionally, to analyze properties of INSTI and NCINI, transfer inhibition assay and 3′-processing inhibition assay were performed. Results During screening of INIs using the p24 ELISA and TZM-bl luciferase systems, we found an inconsistent result with INSTI and NCINI drugs. Following infection of MT2 and TZM-bl cells with T-tropic HIV-1 strain, both INSTI and NCINI treatments induced significant p24 reduction in MT2 cells. However, NCINI showed no antiviral activity in the TZM-bl luciferase system, indicating that this widely used and convenient antiretroviral assay is not suitable for screening of NCINI compounds that target the second round of HIV-1 replication. Conclusion Accordingly, we recommend application of other assay procedures, such as p24 ELISA or reverse transcription activity, in lieu of the TZM-bl luciferase system for preliminary NCINI drug screening. Utilization of appropriate analytical methods based on underlying mechanisms is necessary for accurate assessment of drug efficacy.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12985-020-01476-xIntegraseAnti-HIV drugHIV-1Non-catalytic integrase inhibitorScreening method
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ki Hoon Park
Minjee Kim
Seoung Eun Bae
Hee Jung Lee
Kyung-Chang Kim
Byeong Sun Choi
Young Bong Kim
spellingShingle Ki Hoon Park
Minjee Kim
Seoung Eun Bae
Hee Jung Lee
Kyung-Chang Kim
Byeong Sun Choi
Young Bong Kim
Study on suitable analysis method for HIV-1 non-catalytic integrase inhibitor
Virology Journal
Integrase
Anti-HIV drug
HIV-1
Non-catalytic integrase inhibitor
Screening method
author_facet Ki Hoon Park
Minjee Kim
Seoung Eun Bae
Hee Jung Lee
Kyung-Chang Kim
Byeong Sun Choi
Young Bong Kim
author_sort Ki Hoon Park
title Study on suitable analysis method for HIV-1 non-catalytic integrase inhibitor
title_short Study on suitable analysis method for HIV-1 non-catalytic integrase inhibitor
title_full Study on suitable analysis method for HIV-1 non-catalytic integrase inhibitor
title_fullStr Study on suitable analysis method for HIV-1 non-catalytic integrase inhibitor
title_full_unstemmed Study on suitable analysis method for HIV-1 non-catalytic integrase inhibitor
title_sort study on suitable analysis method for hiv-1 non-catalytic integrase inhibitor
publisher BMC
series Virology Journal
issn 1743-422X
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Abstract Background Integrase (IN) is an essential protein for HIV replication that catalyzes insertion of the reverse-transcribed viral genome into the host chromosome during the early steps of viral infection. Highly active anti-retroviral therapy is a HIV/AIDS treatment method that combines three or more antiviral drugs often formulated from compounds that inhibit the activities of viral reverse transcriptase and protease enzymes. Early IN inhibitors (INIs) mainly serve as integrase strand transfer inhibitors (INSTI) that disrupt strand transfer by binding the catalytic core domain of IN. However, mutations of IN can confer resistance to INSTI. Therefore, non-catalytic integrase inhibitors (NCINI) have been developed as next-generation INIs. Methods In this study, we evaluated and compared the activity of INSTI and NCINI according to the analysis method. Antiviral activity was compared using p24 ELISA with MT2 cell and TZM-bl luciferase system with TZM-bl cell. Each drug was serially diluted and treated to MT2 and TZM-b1 cells, infected with HIV-1 AD8 strain and incubated for 5 and 2 days, respectively. Additionally, to analyze properties of INSTI and NCINI, transfer inhibition assay and 3′-processing inhibition assay were performed. Results During screening of INIs using the p24 ELISA and TZM-bl luciferase systems, we found an inconsistent result with INSTI and NCINI drugs. Following infection of MT2 and TZM-bl cells with T-tropic HIV-1 strain, both INSTI and NCINI treatments induced significant p24 reduction in MT2 cells. However, NCINI showed no antiviral activity in the TZM-bl luciferase system, indicating that this widely used and convenient antiretroviral assay is not suitable for screening of NCINI compounds that target the second round of HIV-1 replication. Conclusion Accordingly, we recommend application of other assay procedures, such as p24 ELISA or reverse transcription activity, in lieu of the TZM-bl luciferase system for preliminary NCINI drug screening. Utilization of appropriate analytical methods based on underlying mechanisms is necessary for accurate assessment of drug efficacy.
topic Integrase
Anti-HIV drug
HIV-1
Non-catalytic integrase inhibitor
Screening method
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12985-020-01476-x
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