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Journal of Virology, September 2002, p. 9079-9086, Vol. 76, No. 18
0022-538X/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.76.18.9079-9086.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Immunology Program, North Carolina State University, Raleigh,1 Trimeris, Inc., Durham, North Carolina2
Received 10 April 2002/ Accepted 13 June 2002
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When gp120 of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) binds to CD4 receptors, it induces conformational changes in gp41 that expose the hydrophobic region of gp41, which is essential for membrane fusion activity (8). Proteolysis studies have shown that the coiled C- and coiled N-terminal regions of the gp41 ectodomain interact to form a highly stable helical trimeric complex of heterodimers with the HR1 and HR2 regions oriented in an antiparallel manner. The interaction of these domains is required for membrane fusion and infection of the host cell (1, 3, 4, 12, 13). When analogous experiments were performed with the gp41 ectodomain of simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV), the results were almost identical, supporting the idea that these functional regions of the gp41 ectodomain are conserved among lentiviruses (1, 13).
Coiled-coil or helical domains appear to be a generalized feature of viral fusion proteins, and this motif has been exploited in generating antiviral fusion agents for a number of viruses, including HIV and several members of the paramyxovirus family (11, 22, 23).
Studies with HIV-1 demonstrate that synthetic peptides representing discrete regions of the fusion protein (gp41) effectively block virus-mediated cell-cell fusion, as well as virus infection of T cells, by blocking the HR1-HR2 interaction that is necessary for fusion. Two synthetic peptides, designated T21 (DP107) and T20 (DP178), were shown to be potent inhibitors of HIV-1-mediated cell-cell fusion (22, 23). T21, derived from an amino acid sequence adjacent to the gp41 fusion peptide sequence, was shown by circular dichroism to have a stable coiled-coil structure in phosphate-buffered saline and also was able to block HIV infection and fusion at concentrations of <5 µg/ml (22). Importantly, when a proline residue was substituted within the amino acid sequence of T21, the coiled-coil structure was lost and the mutant T21 no longer blocked fusion or infection (22). This finding establishes a clear structure-function relationship between the coiled-coil conformation and the antiviral properties of T21.
The peptide T20, derived from an amino acid sequence just amino terminal to the gp41 transmembrane region, completely blocked virus-mediated cell-cell fusion at 1 to 2 ng/ml (23). Although analysis of the T20 primary amino acid sequence predicts a coiled-coil structure, at pH 7 the synthetic peptide contains only about 20% helical structure as determined by circular dichroism (12). Nonetheless, this peptide displays unprecedented antiviral activity (23).
Similar HR2 peptides have been designed, tested, and demonstrated to be active inhibitors of SIV and HIV-2 (S. Barney, personal communication). In addition, Carr and Kim identified a coiled-coil domain as the key structural element involved in triggering influenza hemagglutinin-mediated membrane fusion (2).
As the Env protein of FIV, a related lentivirus, is processed in a manner similar to those of HIV and SIV (7), and as FIV causes cell fusion (6, 19, 24), its gp40 protein (TM) was expected to have similar heptad repeat structure-function motifs. Experiments were initiated with FIV based on the idea that the HIV-1 gp41 ectodomain and the fusion process are similar for all lentiviruses. Therefore, the antiviral activity observed using synthetic peptides from the C-terminal region of the gp41 ectodomain (for inhibiting HIV and SIV) must also be present in FIV. To test this idea, computerized antiviral searching technology (CAST), an amino acid sequence motif search strategy based on the predicted secondary structure of T20 and T21, was used to define areas in FIV Env that were homologous to the domains in the gp41 protein of HIV based on which the HIV antiviral peptides were designed. Overlapping 35-amino acid (aa) peptides from the HR2 region in FIV were designed. Selected peptides from this walk were synthesized and tested for antiviral activity. The results of this study demonstrate that synthetic peptides selected from the T20-like domain of FIV are effective antivirals in vitro.
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Virus isolates. FIV-NCSU1 (clade A), isolated from a naturally FIV-infected, feline leukemia virus-seronegative cat, was used in the infectivity assay and has been described previously (19). A virus stock was prepared by infecting FCD4-E cells with this isolate and harvesting the supernatant. Supernatant with a high 50% tissue culture infective dose (3.54 x 106) was filtered (0.2-µm pore size) and stored at -80°C. FIV-Petaluma (clade A) was used to chronically infect CrFK cells as previously described (16, 25). FIV-PPR (clade A) is a molecular clone derived from a cat in San Diego, Calif. (17). FIV-TM2 (clade B) is an isolate from Japan (14).
CAST identification of anti-FIV peptides. CAST is an algorithm that identifies helical motifs from primary amino acid sequences based on the predicted secondary structure (11). This computer search strategy has been used successfully to identify biologically active peptides in both the T21-like (HR1) and T20-like (HR2) domains of several viruses, including respiratory syncytial virus, measles virus, human parainfluenza virus 3, SIV, HIV-1, and HIV-2 (11, 22). Domains within the FIV envelope that were predicted to form helical structures similar to those of T20 and T21 in HIV-1 gp41 were identified by analyzing the primary amino acid sequences of the FIV gp40 of Petaluma, TM2, PPR, and NCSU1 virus isolates using the CAST motif searching strategy. Potential helical domains identified in these publicly available sequences were compared with the gp40 sequence of FIV-NCSU1. Overlapping peptides, 35 aa in length, from FIV-NCSU1 were designed from the area identified as the T20-like domain (HR2), and 15 peptides from this walk were selected to be synthesized. Once purified, the peptides were tested for antiviral activity in the FIV syncytial assay and the FCD4-E infectivity reverse transcriptase (RT) assay. The most potent compounds were also checked for cross-reactivity in the HIV syncytial assay.
Peptide synthesis. Peptides were synthesized at Trimeris, Inc., on a Rainin Symphony Multiplex multiple peptide synthesizer. Rink-amide 4-methylbenzhydryl amine resin (Nova Biochemicals) served as the solid phase and provided carboxy-terminal blockade. Briefly, each 9-fluorenylmethoxy cabonyl amino acid (Rainin or Nova Biochemicals) that is appropriately protected was activated. After coupling, the new N-terminal amino acid residue was deprotected. The resins were washed in preparation for the next cycle and addition of another residue. Following complete synthesis, the amino terminus was blocked through automated acetylation on the synthesizer. Peptides were purified by reverse-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography. Verification of peptide purity and composition was performed by analytic high-pressure liquid chromatography (Trimeris, Inc.). The peptides were each given a unique identifier beginning with T. Peptide concentrations were determined using the method of Edelhoch (5).
FIV syncytial assay. FIV mediates syncytium formation. The assay described here utilizes HeLa cells, as they express CXCR4 (24), the only known receptor for FIV, and have been shown to fuse with persistently infected CrFK cells (24). HeLa cells were plated in a 96-well flat-bottom plate at a concentration of 10,000 per well in 100 µl of HeLa medium and allowed to adhere overnight. The following day, the culture medium was aspirated and peptide was added in a dilution series in 50 µl of medium. CrFK-P+ cells (5 x 102 in 150 µl of medium) were added to give reproducible numbers of syncytia. After 24 h, the plates were fixed and stained with crystal violet (stock stain, 2.5 g of crystal violet, 1.25 g of Giemsa stain, 500 ml of 80% methanol; working solution, 200 ml of stock and 200 ml of 80% methanol). Stained syncytial plaques (fused cells that are five cell diameters or greater) are counted using a stereo dissecting microscope. Dose-response curves are generated, and 50 and 90% effective concentrations (EC50 and EC90) for the peptides are determined. When the number of syncytia formed within 24 h is compared to the number of CrFK-P+ cells plated, there is a linear correlation between the number of infected cells plated and the number of syncytia produced, suggesting that only approximately 10 to 14% of the CrFK-P+ cells create syncytia.
FCD4-E infectivity assay for RT. The FCD4-E lymphocyte infectivity assay was used to assess the abilities of peptides to inhibit productive FIV infection as measured by RT production. FCD4-E cells were plated at 50,000 to 100,000 per well in 100 µl of RPMI 1640 medium (supplemented with 10% FBS, 10 mM HEPES, 2 mM L-glutamine, 0.075% sodium bicarbonate, 2.5 x 10-5 M 2-mercaptoethanol, penicillin [100 U/ml], streptomycin [100µg/ml], and IL-2 [100 U/ml; kindly provided by the Biological Resources Branch of the National Institutes of Health]). The compounds to be tested were added in 50 µl of FCD4-E medium (without rhIL-2), and then NCSU1 virus at a multiplicity of infection of 0.1 was added in 50 µl of FCD4-E medium (without rhIL-2). After incubation for 5 days at 37°C in 5% CO2, samples of the supernatant were harvested, lysed in Triton X-100 (final concentration, 1%), and assayed for RT activity (23).
RT assay.
Samples of supernatant treated with Triton X-100 were assayed for RT activity as described previously (15). Briefly, 10 µl of a test sample was added to 50 µl of RT reaction mixture and incubated in a 37°C water bath for 2 h. The RT reaction buffer (for 20 samples) consisted of 859.5 µl of double-distilled H2O, 50 µl of 1 M Tris buffer (pH 8.0), 20 µl of 0.25 M MgCl2, 7.5 µl of 1 M potassium chloride (KCl), 2 µl of 1 M dithiothreitol, 10 µl of poly(A) · oligo(dT), 50 µl of Nonidet P-40, and 1 µl of
-32P-labeled-ATP. The products (10 µl) of each reaction were spotted on D81 ion-exchange paper in triplicate and allowed to dry for 30 min. The papers were washed with 2x SSC (1x SSC is 0.15 M NaCl plus 0.015 M sodium citrate) four times for 5 min each time and allowed to dry for another 30 min. The RT blots were read by a Molecular Dynamics PhosphorImager and analyzed by ImageQuant. The values were corrected for background, and pixel intensity values were used to quantitate positive versus negative wells and to determine EC50s and EC90s. The viral titer derived at each concentration of peptide was determined using the Reed-Muench (18) calculation and compared to the infected control titer. The concentration of peptide that reduced the viral titer by 1 log unit is the concentration of peptide at which Vn/VO is 0.1, where Vn equals the titer in the presence of concentration x of inhibitor and VO equals the titer in the absence of inhibitor. The Karber method (10) was used to determine the EC50 in relation to the pixel intensity determined for each well.
HIV syncytial assay.
The HIV syncytial assays were performed as described by Wild et al. (22). Dose-response curves were generated, and the EC50s were calculated as stated above. In brief, MOLT-4 cells (
7 x 104) were incubated with CEM4 cells (1.0 x 104 to 1.2 x 104) chronically infected with HIV-1 IIIb in 96-well plates (half-area cluster plates) in 80 µl of culture medium. Serial dilutions of peptide inhibitors were added in 10 µl of deionized water, and the inhibitor-cell mixtures were incubated for 18 to 24 h at 37°C and 5% CO2. Multinucleated cells, syncytia, were counted using an inverted microscope.
Cytotoxicity assay. Measurement of cell viability in the presence and absence of potential antiviral compounds was carried out using the metabolic reduction of XTT {2,3-bis[2-methoxy-4-nitro-5-sulfonphenyl]-5-[(phenylamino)carbonyl]-2H-tetrazoliumhydroxide} to a soluble brown product (XTT-Formazan) in surviving and metabolizing cells as previously described (20). Previously prepared monolayers (HeLa cells) were incubated with and without titrated peptide solutions for 24 h. At the end of incubation, XTT was added. Following color development, the A450 of each well was measured and compared to those of untreated controls. The results were expressed as a percentage of the absorbance of the untreated control. The 50% toxic dose (the concentration at which XTT reduction is equal to 50% of the untreated control) was determined by the Karber method (10). The selectivity index was calculated by dividing the 50% toxic dose of the compound by the EC50 of the same compound.
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FIG. 1. Map of NCSU1, Petaluma, PPR, and TM2 FIV gp41 proteins showing HR1 and HR2 as defined by CAST.
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FIG. 2. FIV-NCSU1 HR2 peptide walks. The overlapping walks were designed to walk through the HR2 domain that was defined by CAST by moving a single amino acid over in the amino-terminal-to-carboxy-terminal direction. This walk covers additional amino acids on both the amino and carboxy ends of the HR2 domain. The walks begin with aa 714 and proceed through aa 776. The sequences depicted here are the peptides that were actually synthesized and tested against virus.
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FIG. 3. FIV syncytial plaque-forming assay measures FIV-induced cell-cell fusion. (A) Uninfected HeLa cell monolayer. (B) HeLa cell monolayer infected by overlaying it with persistently infected CrFK cells at a concentration of 500 per well and incubating it overnight at 37°C.
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FIG. 4. HR2 peptides inhibit FIV-mediated cell fusion. T1569 is used here to give an example of the inhibition seen with an active peptide. (A) Complete inhibition of virus infection. (B) As the peptide concentration is diluted, syncytium formation is observed. (C) Complete loss of virus inhibition by T1569 compared to the infected control seen in Fig. 3B. The T1569 concentration is shown above each panel.
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TABLE 1. FIV HR2 peptides in the FIV syncytial plaque-forming assay
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FIG. 5. EC50 for each peptide in the syncytium formation assay. The peptides are in order from amino terminal to carboxy terminal. The graph represents the area of increased activity in the HR2 peptide walk.
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FIG. 6. Comparison of FIV peptide antiviral activities versus cytotoxicities. Cytotoxicity is plotted as a percentage of those of the untreated controls (T1971 and T1972). Antiviral activity as measured by syncytium formation is given as a percentage of those of the infected controls (T1971 and T1972).
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FIG. 7. FIV infection of FCD4-E cells is inhibited by selected HR2 peptides. The dose-response curves for T1569, T1577, T1578, and T1588 activities against RT production are plotted as the amount of 32P incorporation versus peptide concentration. The EC50s are given in Table 2.
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TABLE 2. Comparison of activities of selected HR2 peptides in plaque-forming and RT infectivity assays
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5 times the diameter of uninfected cells) compared to the number of syncytia in untreated infected controls. The majority of the FIV HR2 peptides tested exhibited no inhibitory effect on HIV-induced cell fusion at 2.3 µM or below (Table 3). However, T1577 and T1967 showed some activity, with EC50s of 1.933 and 2.053 µM, respectively (Table 3). T1577 has an EC50 of 0.050 µM in the FIV fusion assay, which is more active by >38-fold against the FIV virus isolates tested than against HIV. Interestingly, T1967 has an EC50 of 2.454 µM in the FIV plaque-forming assay, which is less than its EC50 in the HIV fusion assay. When the reverse experiment was done, testing the HIV-1 HR2 peptides T20 and T649 (Table 3) in the FIV syncytial assay, similar results were observed. T20 had an EC50 of 17.587 µM, while T649 exhibited no activity at concentrations up to 22 µM. T20 and T649 both exhibit EC50s of approximately 0.0004 µM in cell-cell fusion assays against HIV-1 IIIb. |
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TABLE 3. Activities of FIV HR2 peptides against HIV-1 and HIV HR2 peptides against FIVa
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The goal of the studies reported here was to define the antiviral or biological activities of the HR2 peptides derived from the FIV gp40 protein. We hypothesized that biological activity is indicative of the HR2 peptides binding to the HR1 domain in FIV gp40, as had previously been demonstrated with HIV. Thus, by analogy to the HIV system, inhibition of FIV-induced fusion and infectivity indicates that HR2 peptides bind to the HR1 domain. To address this question, we determined the areas in the FIV TM (gp40) that are similar to the predictive
-helical domains of HIV. This was accomplished by using a computer motif searching program, CAST, based on HIV helical-domain sequences to identify potential helical heptad repeat regions in FIV gp40 sequences (Fig. 2). HIV peptides from the HR2 domain are more potent than peptides from the HR1 domain (11, 12, 23). Therefore, in this study, only peptides derived from the HR2 domains of FIV gp40 were synthesized and tested for antiviral activity against FIV. The initial experiments in the FIV syncytial assay, using CrFK-P+ and HeLa cells, took advantage of the capability of FIV Env to bind to the CXCR4 receptors present on HeLa cells, causing cell fusion and syncytium formation (24). CXCR4 is also a coreceptor for the syncytium-inducing strains of HIV (24). Table 1 shows that peptides from the HR2 domain of FIV exhibit activity against FIV, as demonstrated by inhibition of syncytium formation. The most active peptides are T1971 and T1972, and both exhibit EC50s of 0.01 µM. As with HIV-inhibitory peptides, the trend for the more active FIV HR2 peptides to be located towards the center of the walk and less active peptides to be located at the outer edges of the walk reflects the primary potential interaction sites between the FIV HR1 and HR2 domains. Whether this interaction is trimeric in FIV is not known. Nevertheless, the knowledge that this interaction is a trimer in both HIV (3, 13) and SIV (1) supports the assumption that this would also be true for FIV. However, these peptides were not as active against FIV as T20 is against HIV. By using a fluorescent probe that displays little fluorescence in aqueous solutions and more fluorescence when bound to hydrophobic groups, Jones et al. detected and quantified changes in fluorescence upon the interaction of gp120-gp41-expressing cells and appropriate target cells in the HIV fusion process (9). By utilizing this method, these investigators measured a lag time of approximately 10 min from the maximum fluorescence, due to the conformational changes induced by gp120 binding to CD4 and the appropriate coreceptor in HIV, to the actual start of lipid mixing of the membranes. The transient stage shown in the Kim-Chan model for HIV fusion (4) is supported by this observation. It is possible that this transient intermediate stage lasts for a shorter time in FIV fusion and therefore may require more peptide to compete with the interaction of the HR1 and HR2 domains.
Testing in the FCD4-E infectivity assay using the NCSU1 isolate was done to demonstrate that productive virus infection, as measured by RT, is blocked in the presence of the antiviral peptides that were active in FIV cell-cell fusion assays. The results shown in Fig. 7 and Table 2 confirm that the peptides T1569, T1577, T1578, and T1588 are effective inhibitors of FIV infection as measured by RT production. A comparison of EC50s from the syncytium-forming assay and the infectivity assay is also shown in Table 2. The differences in EC50s suggest that less peptide is required for prevention of virus-induced cell-cell fusion than for FIV infectivity. A similar difference in activity has also been observed for T20 in the fusion assay versus the infectivity assay, although the reasons for this are not yet understood (23). The fusion and infectivity assays are very different, utilizing different cell lines that may account for the observed differences in the EC50s. However, another possible explanation may be reflected in the lengths of time required by the different assays. The fusion assay is a 24-h assay, and the infectivity assay requires 5 days for its incubation period. It is possible that the peptides begin to degrade over time, which would ultimately require more peptide to achieve 50% inhibition.
It has been shown that the NCSU1 FIV isolate is unable to infect CrFK cells (26). Therefore, CrFK cells that were persistently infected with the Petaluma isolate of FIV were used in the syncytium-forming assay. Because the peptides were designed using the NCSU1 isolate gp40 sequence as a template, there was a question as to whether the activities of these peptides against FIV-Petaluma are different from their activities against FIV-NCSU1. Sequence analysis of the two virus isolates showed that only 1 aa was different in the HR1 domain in the Petaluma strain compared to the NCSU1 strain, and no differences were observed in the HR2 domain. There were two amino acid changes observed in the peptide walk outside the HR2 domain. At position 758, there is a K
T change, and at position 771 there is a G
R change. The K change to a T alters the hydrophobicity of the amino acid residue at this site from -3.9 to -0.7, and the G-to-R change alters the hydrophobicity of this amino acid residue from -0.4 to -4.5. These differences appeared not to affect the activities of the peptides, as the peptides most active against FIV-Petaluma in the syncytium-forming assay were also the most active against FIV-NCSU1 in the infectivity assay.
The specificity of the FIV peptides for FIV compared to HIV was addressed by examining their activities against HIV-1 IIIb in a fusion assay. T20 has been tested against a variety of viruses, such as HIV-2 and SIV, and was found to be largely inactive against them. Therefore, it was not unexpected that the FIV peptides were not very active against HIV. As shown in Table 3, two peptides (T1577 and T1967) exhibited some effects on HIV fusion. The EC50 for T1577 in the HIV fusion assay was >38-fold higher than the EC50 observed in the FIV syncytium-forming assay. Conversely, testing of the HIV HR2 peptides T20 and T649 (both highly active against HIV-1) in the FIV fusion assay demonstrated a similar lack of activity against FIV. T20 has an EC50 of 0.0004 µM in the HIV fusion assay (23), while in the FIV syncytial assay, the EC50 is 17.587 µM, an 88,000-fold difference (Table 3). The specificities of the peptides seen here reflect how the peptides are designed. In each case, the peptide that was active for a specific virus was designed based on that virus' sequence. If the primary amino acid sequence of HIV and FIV heptad repeat regions exhibited greater sequence homology, peptides from these regions would most probably display greater antiviral cross-reactivity.
The specificity results are of interest because they demonstrate that, although lentiviruses may have HR2 regions that are similar in secondary structure and function (i.e., important for virus fusion), the primary amino acid sequence of the HR2 domain is a key factor in determining the antiviral activities of these peptides.
In summary, peptide sequences have been successfully identified within discrete regions of the FIV gp40 that are capable of suppressing FIV fusion and infectivity. The searching strategy, implemented by CAST and used successfully in the past to identify common secondary-structure motifs that are analogous to those found in HIV gp41 (11) and in a variety of other viruses (11), has now been shown to be successful for FIV. Studies have demonstrated that enveloped viruses in many cases share a common mechanism that enables the virus to fuse with its host cell membrane (11). The influx of structural and functional information on the HIV-1 fusion process has shown that viral entry is a valid target for antivirals (1, 3, 4, 12, 13). A small-animal model for HIV infection continues to be an important requirement for use in developing therapies for treatment of HIV infection and AIDS in humans. This study demonstrates another area of similarity between HIV and FIV and further supports the potential for FIV as a model for HIV.
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-helical domain of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 gp41 are potent inhibitors of virus infection. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 91:9770-9774.
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