The Structural Basis for the Interdependence of Drug Resistance in the HIV-1 Protease

The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) protease (PR) is a critical drug target as it is responsible for virion maturation. Mutations within the active site (1°) of the PR directly interfere with inhibitor binding while mutations distal to the active site (2°) to restore enzymatic fitness. I...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ragland, Debra A.
Format: Others
Published: eScholarship@UMMS 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/879
https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1881&context=gsbs_diss
id ndltd-umassmed.edu-oai-escholarship.umassmed.edu-gsbs_diss-1881
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-umassmed.edu-oai-escholarship.umassmed.edu-gsbs_diss-18812021-09-14T17:23:28Z The Structural Basis for the Interdependence of Drug Resistance in the HIV-1 Protease Ragland, Debra A. The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) protease (PR) is a critical drug target as it is responsible for virion maturation. Mutations within the active site (1°) of the PR directly interfere with inhibitor binding while mutations distal to the active site (2°) to restore enzymatic fitness. Increasing mutation number is not directly proportional to the severity of resistance, suggesting that resistance is not simply additive but that it is interdependent. The interdependency of both primary and secondary mutations to drive protease inhibitor (PI) resistance is grossly understudied. To structurally and dynamically characterize the direct role of secondary mutations in drug resistance, I selected a panel of single-site mutant protease crystal structures complexed with the PI darunavir (DRV). From these studies, I developed a network hypothesis that explains how mutations outside the active site are able to perpetuate changes to the active site of the protease to disrupt inhibitor binding. I then expanded the panel to include highly mutated multi-drug resistant variants. To elucidate the interdependency between primary and secondary mutations I used statistical and machine-learning techniques to determine which specific mutations underlie the perturbations of key inter-molecular interactions. From these studies, I have determined that mutations distal to the active site are able to perturb the global PR hydrogen bonding patterns, while primary and secondary mutations cooperatively perturb hydrophobic contacts between the PR and DRV. Discerning and exploiting the mechanisms that underlie drug resistance in viral targets could proactively ameliorate both current treatment and inhibitor design for HIV-1 targets. 2016-12-13T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/879 https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1881&context=gsbs_diss Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved. select GSBS Dissertations and Theses eScholarship@UMMS HIV-1 Protease Drug Resistance Compensatory Mutations Accessory Mutations Secondary Mutations Peripheral Mutations AIDS Computational Biology Statistics Machine Learning Molecular Dynamics Simulations Crystallography Algebra Applied Statistics Biochemistry Biophysics Biostatistics Statistical Theory Structural Biology Theory and Algorithms
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic HIV-1
Protease
Drug Resistance
Compensatory Mutations
Accessory Mutations
Secondary Mutations
Peripheral Mutations
AIDS
Computational Biology
Statistics
Machine Learning
Molecular Dynamics Simulations
Crystallography
Algebra
Applied Statistics
Biochemistry
Biophysics
Biostatistics
Statistical Theory
Structural Biology
Theory and Algorithms
spellingShingle HIV-1
Protease
Drug Resistance
Compensatory Mutations
Accessory Mutations
Secondary Mutations
Peripheral Mutations
AIDS
Computational Biology
Statistics
Machine Learning
Molecular Dynamics Simulations
Crystallography
Algebra
Applied Statistics
Biochemistry
Biophysics
Biostatistics
Statistical Theory
Structural Biology
Theory and Algorithms
Ragland, Debra A.
The Structural Basis for the Interdependence of Drug Resistance in the HIV-1 Protease
description The human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) protease (PR) is a critical drug target as it is responsible for virion maturation. Mutations within the active site (1°) of the PR directly interfere with inhibitor binding while mutations distal to the active site (2°) to restore enzymatic fitness. Increasing mutation number is not directly proportional to the severity of resistance, suggesting that resistance is not simply additive but that it is interdependent. The interdependency of both primary and secondary mutations to drive protease inhibitor (PI) resistance is grossly understudied. To structurally and dynamically characterize the direct role of secondary mutations in drug resistance, I selected a panel of single-site mutant protease crystal structures complexed with the PI darunavir (DRV). From these studies, I developed a network hypothesis that explains how mutations outside the active site are able to perpetuate changes to the active site of the protease to disrupt inhibitor binding. I then expanded the panel to include highly mutated multi-drug resistant variants. To elucidate the interdependency between primary and secondary mutations I used statistical and machine-learning techniques to determine which specific mutations underlie the perturbations of key inter-molecular interactions. From these studies, I have determined that mutations distal to the active site are able to perturb the global PR hydrogen bonding patterns, while primary and secondary mutations cooperatively perturb hydrophobic contacts between the PR and DRV. Discerning and exploiting the mechanisms that underlie drug resistance in viral targets could proactively ameliorate both current treatment and inhibitor design for HIV-1 targets.
author Ragland, Debra A.
author_facet Ragland, Debra A.
author_sort Ragland, Debra A.
title The Structural Basis for the Interdependence of Drug Resistance in the HIV-1 Protease
title_short The Structural Basis for the Interdependence of Drug Resistance in the HIV-1 Protease
title_full The Structural Basis for the Interdependence of Drug Resistance in the HIV-1 Protease
title_fullStr The Structural Basis for the Interdependence of Drug Resistance in the HIV-1 Protease
title_full_unstemmed The Structural Basis for the Interdependence of Drug Resistance in the HIV-1 Protease
title_sort structural basis for the interdependence of drug resistance in the hiv-1 protease
publisher eScholarship@UMMS
publishDate 2016
url https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/gsbs_diss/879
https://escholarship.umassmed.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1881&context=gsbs_diss
work_keys_str_mv AT raglanddebraa thestructuralbasisfortheinterdependenceofdrugresistanceinthehiv1protease
AT raglanddebraa structuralbasisfortheinterdependenceofdrugresistanceinthehiv1protease
_version_ 1719481026459205632