4ep2 Citations

Structural, kinetic, and thermodynamic studies of specificity designed HIV-1 protease.

Protein Sci 21 1029-41 (2012)
Related entries: 4ep3, 4epj, 4eq0, 4eqj

Cited: 10 times
EuropePMC logo PMID: 22549928

Abstract

HIV-1 protease recognizes and cleaves more than 12 different substrates leading to viral maturation. While these substrates share no conserved motif, they are specifically selected for and cleaved by protease during viral life cycle. Drug resistant mutations evolve within the protease that compromise inhibitor binding but allow the continued recognition of all these substrates. While the substrate envelope defines a general shape for substrate recognition, successfully predicting the determinants of substrate binding specificity would provide additional insights into the mechanism of altered molecular recognition in resistant proteases. We designed a variant of HIV protease with altered specificity using positive computational design methods and validated the design using X-ray crystallography and enzyme biochemistry. The engineered variant, Pr3 (A28S/D30F/G48R), was designed to preferentially bind to one out of three of HIV protease's natural substrates; RT-RH over p2-NC and CA-p2. In kinetic assays, RT-RH binding specificity for Pr3 increased threefold compared to the wild-type (WT), which was further confirmed by isothermal titration calorimetry. Crystal structures of WT protease and the designed variant in complex with RT-RH, CA-p2, and p2-NC were determined. Structural analysis of the designed complexes revealed that one of the engineered substitutions (G48R) potentially stabilized heterogeneous flap conformations, thereby facilitating alternate modes of substrate binding. Our results demonstrate that while substrate specificity could be engineered in HIV protease, the structural pliability of protease restricted the propagation of interactions as predicted. These results offer new insights into the plasticity and structural determinants of substrate binding specificity of the HIV-1 protease.

Articles - 4ep2 mentioned but not cited (1)

  1. Structural, kinetic, and thermodynamic studies of specificity designed HIV-1 protease. Alvizo O, Mittal S, Mayo SL, Schiffer CA. Protein Sci 21 1029-1041 (2012)


Reviews citing this publication (2)

  1. Linkers in the structural biology of protein-protein interactions. Reddy Chichili VP, Kumar V, Sivaraman J. Protein Sci 22 153-167 (2013)
  2. HIV Genome-Wide Protein Associations: a Review of 30 Years of Research. Li G, De Clercq E. Microbiol Mol Biol Rev 80 679-731 (2016)

Articles citing this publication (7)

  1. Fullerene Derivatives Strongly Inhibit HIV-1 Replication by Affecting Virus Maturation without Impairing Protease Activity. Martinez ZS, Castro E, Seong CS, Cerón MR, Echegoyen L, Llano M. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 60 5731-5741 (2016)
  2. Immature HIV-1 assembles from Gag dimers leaving partial hexamers at lattice edges as potential substrates for proteolytic maturation. Tan A, Pak AJ, Morado DR, Voth GA, Briggs JAG. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 118 e2020054118 (2021)
  3. Impact of M36I polymorphism on the interaction of HIV-1 protease with its substrates: insights from molecular dynamics. Costa MG, Benetti-Barbosa TG, Desdouits N, Blondel A, Bisch PM, Pascutti PG, Batista PR. BMC Genomics 15 Suppl 7 S5 (2014)
  4. A Direct Interaction with RNA Dramatically Enhances the Catalytic Activity of the HIV-1 Protease In Vitro. Potempa M, Nalivaika E, Ragland D, Lee SK, Schiffer CA, Swanstrom R. J Mol Biol 427 2360-2378 (2015)
  5. Exploration of the Substrate Preference of Lysine Methyltransferase SMYD3 by Molecular Dynamics Simulations. Sun J, Shi F, Yang N. ACS Omega 4 19573-19581 (2019)
  6. In silico prediction of mutant HIV-1 proteases cleaving a target sequence. Jensen JH, Willemoës M, Winther JR, De Vico L. PLoS One 9 e95833 (2014)
  7. Oligomeric interactions maintain active-site structure in a noncooperative enzyme family. Li Y, Zhang R, Wang C, Forouhar F, Clarke OB, Vorobiev S, Singh S, Montelione GT, Szyperski T, Xu Y, Hunt JF. EMBO J 41 e108368 (2022)