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Journal of Virology, April 2005, p. 4774-4781, Vol. 79, No. 8
0022-538X/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.79.8.4774-4781.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Division of Viral Products,1 Division of Biostatistics, Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, U.S. Food and Drug Administration,2 Protein Expression Lab, National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda,4 12 Lodge Place, Rockville, Maryland3
Received 28 September 2004/ Accepted 3 December 2004
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FIG. 1. Map of gp41 ectodomain and corresponding peptides. The JR-CSF Nw peptide corresponds to wild-type residues in the N-HR in the JR-CSF envelope glycoprotein. a and d indicate positions in the heptad repeat motif. N44* represents the peptide used for selecting the resistant virus. The Nm peptide contains the resistance mutation at position 577. HXB2 indicates residues in the HXB2 clone of HIV. The JR-CSF Cw peptide corresponds to wild-type residues in the C-HR in the JR-CSF envelope glycoprotein. The Cm peptide contains the resistance mutation at position 648. The HXB2 C34 peptide corresponds to C-HR residues in the HXB2 clone of HIV. FP, fusion peptide; TM, transmembrane domain; C-tail, cytoplasmic domain.
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Combination antiretroviral therapy, preferably involving agents that target different steps of HIV infection, helps to suppress the emergence of resistant viruses. Whereas C-peptide inhibitors target the N-HR (18, 31), N-peptide inhibitors, including the five-helix bundle inhibitor and the chimeric coiled-coil IZN36, appear to bind the C-HR (14, 33). N peptides may additionally bind to the N-HR, forming homologous interactions in a peptide-gp41 coiled coil (3). To further investigate viral determinants for N-peptide resistance and to gain insight into the Env fusion mechanism, we generated an escape mutant virus with resistance to an N-peptide inhibitor. We found that two mutations in gp41, one each in the N- and C-HRs, provided initial steps in conferring resistance to the N peptide. Unexpectedly, these mutations also conferred cross-resistance to C peptides and altered sensitivity to soluble CD4 (sCD4), implying changes in receptor activation of Env. Molecular modeling suggests that the resistance mutations would not directly impair peptide binding to gp41, and biophysical data suggest that the mutations improve endogenous (viral) 6HB stability. These findings provide insights into Env structure-function relationships and activation of fusion and further suggest a potential pathway for resistance to dominant-negative inhibitors involving increased stability of the target protein.
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Peptides and other reagents. The N-peptide inhibitor N44* (GGVQQQNNLLRAIEAQQHLLQLTVWGIKQLQARILAVERYLKDQ) was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified as previously reported (5). Briefly, the pTCLE-G2C expression plasmid, encoding a TrpLE fusion protein containing residues 540 to 584 from the N-HR of LAI Env, was transformed into BL21(DE3) cells (Novagen), induced with IPTG (isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside), and lysed with a French press. Inclusion bodies were pelleted, washed, and dissolved in 70% formic acid prior to cleavage with 50 mg of cyanogens bromide per ml. The dried products were dissolved in 6 M guanidine-HCl and separated by Sephadex G-50 (26- by 70-cm) gel filtration chromatography in 5% acetic acid. Synthetic peptides C34 (WMEWDREINNYTSLIHSLIEESQNQQEKNEQELL), T20 (YTSLIHSLIEESQNQQEKNEQELLELDKWASLWNWF), Cw (WMEWEKEIENYTNTIYTLIEESQIQQEKNEQELL), Cm (WMEWEKEIENYTNTIYTLIEKSQIQQEKNEQELL), Nw (GIVQQQNNLLRAIEAQQHMLQLTVWGIKQLQARVLAVERYLKDQ), and Nm (GIVQQQNNLLRAIEAQQHMLQLTVWGIKQLRARVLAVERYLKDQ) were made by standard 9-fluorenylmethoxy carbonyl chemistry and purified by high-pressure liquid chromatography (CBER Facility for Biotechnology Resources, Bethesda, Md.). Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and analytic high-pressure liquid chromatography indicated that all of the peptides were > 92% pure. All peptides were confirmed to have the expected molecular weight by using matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time-of-flight mass spectroscopy and to have inhibitory activity by using infectivity assays. sCD4 was purchased from Progenics Pharmaceuticals (Tarrytown, N.Y.). The five-helix inhibitor was kindly provided by Michael Root (Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pa.).
Resistant virus. Viral stocks of HIV type 1 (HIV-1) LAI(JR-CSF) were generated by transfecting pLAI(JR-CSF) into 293T cells by using Fugene 6 (Roche Diagnostics) and collecting filtered culture supernatants after 2 days. Virus was quantified by a reverse transcriptase (RT) assay, as described previously (28), and stored at 80°C. Resistant virus was generated by infecting 106 PM-1 cells with 1.75 x 106 cpm of RT activity from HIV-1 LAI(JR-CSF) virus stock in 4 ml of medium in the presence of 300 nM N44* overnight. The cells were washed twice the next day by centrifugation at 200 x g for 10 min and resuspended at 2 x 105 cells/ml with medium containing the same concentration of peptide. Three days later, supernatants were exchanged with fresh medium containing the peptide, and after the first week, half of the cells and supernatant were removed every 2 days and replaced by an equal volume of peptide-containing medium. Cell supernatants were sampled every 2 days for virus production by RT activity. Supernatants containing the highest level of RT activity were then used for subsequent rounds of infection, using approximately 106 cpm of RT activity and following the same infection protocol as described above except with increasing peptide concentrations as indicated in Fig. 2.
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FIG. 2. Emergence of peptide-resistant virus. P0 shows virus growth in the absence of peptide. P1 shows growth of the culture in the presence of 300 nM N44*. P2 was initiated from supernatant from the P1 culture and shows growth in the presence of 600 nM N44*. P3 was initiated from supernatant from the P2 culture and shows growth in the presence of 600 nM N44*. P4 was initiated from supernatant from the P3 culture and shows growth in the presence of 1,200 nM N44*.
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Mutagenesis. Point mutations in the gp41 genes of JRCSF and HXB2 expression plasmids were created by using the QuickChange site-directed mutagenesis kit (Stratagene). Two sets of complementary primers, TAATACACTCCTTAATTGAAAAGTCGCAAAACCAGCAAG-TTGCTGGTTTTGCGACTTTTCAATTAAGGAGTGTATTA and TCTGGGGCATCAAGCAGCTCCCGCAAGAATCCTGGCTGTGG-CCACAGCCAGGATTCTTGCGCGGAGCTGCTTGATGCCCCAGA, were used to introduce theQ577R and E648K mutations in the C- and N-HRs of the JR-CSF and HXB2 gp41 genes, respectively. Mutations were verified by sequencing the entire env gene. We note that the sequence we found for the wild-type (WT) env gene of JR-CSF differed from that listed in the Los Alamos HIV database. We found two nucleotide changes at positions 7878 and 7879 in the env gene, GC instead of CG, which resulted in an amino acid change from arginine to alanine at residue 22 of gp41. The other sequence discrepancy, G to A at nucleotide 8302 of the env gene, altered the amino acid sequence from glycine to aspartic acid at residue 164 of gp41.
Infectivity inhibition assay. Pseudovirion stocks with wild-type or mutant Env proteins were generated and assessed for infectivity as previously described (41). Briefly, 3 x 106 293T cells in 10-cm-diameter dishes were cotransfected with 3 µg of the Env expression vector and 2 µg of the Env-deficient viral reporter vector (pNL43-Luc-RE). The supernatants were collected at 48 h posttransfection, quantified by p24 enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (Coulter), and stored at 80°C. One day before infection, 2 x 104 U87-CD4-CCR5 or U87-CD4-X4 cells/well were plated in 96-well dishes in Dulbecco's modified Eagle medium (DMEM) containing 10% fetal calf serum, 2 mM glutamine, 1x antibiotics, 1 mM sodium pyruvate, and 1x nonessential amino acids (DMEM+). Cells were infected with pseudovirus supernatants (approximately 200 ng of p24 per ml for HXB2 pseudoviruses and 20 ng of p24 per ml for the JR-CSF pseudoviruses) in the presence of peptide in a total volume of 100 µl supplemented with 8 µg of Polybrene (Sigma) per ml. After 16 h of incubation, the medium containing the peptide was replaced by 100 µl of fresh DMEM+, and cultures were continued for an additional 24 h at 37°C. The cells were then lysed, and infectivity was measured with a luciferase kit (Promega) and luminometry (L-Max; Molecular Devices).
Thermal denaturation studies. Circular dicrhroism spectra were recorded at 222 nm with a Jasco J 720 instrument equipped with PTC-343 Peltier-type thermostatic cell holder, using a 1-cm-path-length cell with a Teflon stopper (Hellma). Cooling circulating water (20°C) was supplied with a Mulitemp III thermostatic circulator (Amersham Biotech). Stocks of approximately 2.0 mg of N-terminal peptides (in 50 mM sodium formate, pH 3.5) and C-terminal peptides (in 20 mM sodium phosphate, pH 7.0) per ml were mixed (10 µM each) in 20 mM sodium phosphate (pH 7.0) containing 0.2 M NaCl. The salt was required to support solubility of the peptide mixtures. Peptide mixtures (final volume, 0.5 ml) were heated; the temperature was raised 1°C per min with a temperature slope of 20 to 100°C. The step resolution was 1°C, the response time was 1 s, the bandwidth was 1 nm, and the sensitivity 200 m°C. Temperatures at the transition midpoints (melting temperature [Tm]) were estimated from first-derivative plots of the curves.
Statistics. At least five independent dose-response curves, using multiple batches of each pseudovirus, were generated for each inhibitor. The 50% inhibitory concentrations (IC50s) relative to no inhibitor for each individual pseudovirus were calculated with SoftMax Pro software (Molecular Devices). The geometric mean (GM) IC50 was determined for each pseudovirus and inhibitor. To determine the fold change in resistance relative to WT pseudovirus for each inhibitor, the ratios of GM IC50 for mutants to GM IC50 for the wild type were calculated. The IC50 for each mutant pseudovirus was compared with that for the WT pseudovirus on a logarithmic scale by using Dunnett's multiple-comparison option for one-way analysis of variance platform in JMP 5.1.1 statistical software (SAS Institute). The blocking option with "experiment" as a blocking parameter was used to take into account that values for all three mutants and the WT were measured simultaneously in each individual experiment.
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The P2 culture was grown in the presence of 600 nM N44* peptide, and peak RT activity was broad, occurring on days 12 to 20. Supernatant from this culture was used to inoculate the third passage at twice the peptide concentration (1,200 nM). Virus was not detected in this culture after 28 days, so a new third-passage culture (P3) was established from the P2 supernatants at 600 nM to enrich for the resistant virus population. This passage showed peak RT activity on day 14 (Fig. 2) and was used to inoculate the fourth passage (P4), which was grown in the presence of 1,200 nM peptide. RT activity from this culture peaked on day 13. Cellular DNA from this culture was harvested for cloning the env gene from the resistant viruses.
Mapping resistance. To determine residues responsible for resistance, the env genes from integrated proviruses were sequenced and compared with those from control cultures grown in the absence of selection. Direct sequencing of the entire env gene from cellular proviral DNA in duplicate P4 cultures revealed only two mutations, one each in the N- and C-HRs, which were present in duplicate resistant cultures but not in control cultures. An arginine was substituted for glutamine at position 577 (Q577R, numbering referenced to that for HXB2 strain in the Los Alamos National Laboratory database) in the N-HR, and a lysine was substituted for glutamic acid at position 648 (E648K) in the C-HR (Fig. 1). No consistent mutations were seen in gp120. These results were confirmed by sequencing five Env clones, all of which contained the same two gp41 mutations (not shown). Sequencing of serial passages also showed that the C mutation E648K first emerged at P2 and persisted in subsequent cultures, while the N mutation Q577R appeared at P3 (not shown). It is unclear whether the resistance pathway seen here requires sequential acquisition of these mutations.
The mutations were introduced into the JR-CSF Env expression vector. Env proteins produced from these clones were used to make pseudotypes with an Env-deficient HIV luciferase reporter virus to verify the contributions of each mutation to resistance. WT Env, the reconstructed Env mutants with single mutations in the N-HR (N) and C-HR (C), and the double mutant (NC) Env all expressed high levels of processed Env that were equally well incorporated into pseudovirions (not shown). WT and mutant pseudoviruses, which were normalized for p24, did not show statistically significant differences in single-round infectivity assays, although the pseudovirus containing the N mutation trended towards reduced infectivity (not shown).
The IC50s for the N44* peptide were determined for each mutant pseudovirus. Pseudoviruses containing the NC and C mutations exhibited approximately 2- and 1.7-fold increases in resistance, respectively, relative to the WT, while the pseudovirus with the N mutation, which did not emerge in culture in the absence of the C mutation, showed a slight increase in resistance that did not reach statistical significance (Fig. 3A and Table 1). The level of resistance conferred by the NC mutations was lower than expected given the near-wild-type kinetics of the replicating resistant virus after several rounds of selection. This finding may relate to the single-round reporter pseudotype assay, which does not amplify resistance in multiple rounds of infection, or to the use of target cells that express high levels of receptors. We also note that the WT Env showed a higher IC50 in the single-round reporter assay (approximately 600 nM) than in the replicating infection assay (approximately 100 nM). We are currently creating infectious molecular clones containing resistant Env proteins to determine resistance levels for replicating virus. Nevertheless, the resistance conferred by the NC and C mutations was statistically significant and likely represents initial steps in resistance that would confer a strong advantage in a replicating culture under selection. Additional selection would probably lead to accumulation of more mutations that increase resistance.
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FIG. 3. Dose-response curves for inhibitors against WT and mutant pseudoviruses containing N, C, or NC resistance mutations. (A) Inhibition of the JR-CSF pseudoviruses with the N44* peptide. (B) Inhibition of the JR-CSF pseudoviruses with the C34 peptide. (C) Inhibition of the JR-CSF pseudoviruses with sCD4. (D) Inhibition of the HXB2 pseudoviruses with the N44* peptide. (E) Inhibition of the HXB2 pseudoviruses with the C34 peptide. (F) Inhibition of the HXB2 pseudoviruses with sCD4. Luciferase activity for each pseudovirus was normalized to its control culture without inhibitor. Results in panels A to C (JR-CSF pseudoviruses) are averages from all experiments. Results in panels D to F (HXB2 pseudoviruses) are representative graphs from at least five independent experiments.
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TABLE 1. Sensitivities of WT and mutant pseudoviruses against a panel of inhibitors
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Determination of sensitivity to other inhibitors. To further characterize the resistant Env proteins, we assessed sensitivity to other entry inhibitors (Fig. 3B and C). Surprisingly, the N and C mutations also conferred resistance to two overlapping C-peptide fusion inhibitors, C34 and T20 (Fig. 1). For the C34 peptide, each mutation provided an approximately 1.6- to 2-fold increase in resistance (Fig. 3B), but only the double NC mutant provided significant resistance (2-fold) for T20 (Table 1). Cross-resistance between the N- and C-peptide inhibitors was not expected because the peptides bind to different sites of gp41. However, this finding is consistent with the peptide inhibiting the same step. In addition, the N mutation increased sensitivity to inhibition by sCD4. Both the N and NC Env proteins were about 2.5-fold more sensitive to sCD4, while the C Env had no effect (Fig. 3C), indicating that the N mutation dominates the altered phenotype to sCD4.
Transfer of resistance to an X4 virus. Because the NC mutations appeared to affect global fusogenic properties of Env, we speculated that the resistance mutations identified residues that were generally important in regulating Env-mediated fusion. We tested this hypothesis by introducing the resistance mutations into the HXB2 Env, which uses the CXCR4 coreceptor instead of CCR5, and assessing the transferability of the resistant phenotype. Dose-response curves with the N- and C-peptide fusion inhibitors showed the same pattern of resistance (Fig. 3D and E). Resistance to the N peptide was approximately twofold for the NC pseudovirus (Table 1). Cross-resistance to the C34 peptide was slightly more pronounced for the HXB2 Env, with the NC mutant demonstrating 2.8-fold-increased resistance against the C peptide relative to the WT. As with the JR-CSF Env, the N and NC mutations affected sensitivity to sCD4, with the N mutation again being dominant (Fig. 3F). Curiously, however, the mutations conferred increased resistance to sCD4 instead of increased sensitivity as was seen with the JR-CSF Env. Residue 577, therefore, plays a role in receptor activation in both X4 and R5 strains.
Despite the ability to transfer the resistance phenotype with substitutions in the same two residues, the N mutation, alone or combined with the C mutation, had a severe debilitating effect on function of the HXB2 Env (not shown). Previously, we showed that the Q577R mutation in the HXB2 Env reduced infectivity by >90% (40). We verified this markedly reduced activity when we reconstructed a new HXB2 N Env, along with the HXB2 C and NC Env proteins. All HXB2 pseudoviruses incorporated equal amounts of Env (not shown). Fortunately, the high titer of the HXB2 pseudovirion stocks, even with >90% reduced activity, still allowed us to obtain statistically valid data on sensitivity to inhibitors. Nonetheless, the fitness cost of the N mutation indicates that the HXB2 Env would likely take a different resistance pathway or require accumulation of additional compensatory mutations to restore HXB2 Env activity.
Assessment of the impact of resistance mutations on six-helix interactions. As the peptides are believed to inhibit gp41 by forming a peptide-gp41 6HB, we modeled the N and C mutations in the 6HB by using coordinates from a high-resolution structure (43) to gain insights into the resistance mechanism. The C mutation 648K involved a "g" residue in the heptad repeat, which faces away from the N and C helices. The N mutation 577R is an "e" residue of the heptad, which lies in the lip of the hydrophobic pocket and does not appear to provide contacts that are critical for docking C-helix residues into the pocket. Modeling thus did not suggest that the resistance mutations would impair peptide binding to gp41. Earlier in vitro mutagenesis studies also showed that position 577 was a notable exception among "e" and "g" residues in the N-HR in tolerating mutations that preserved Env function (41).
To evaluate how the mutations might affect peptide binding to gp41 and the endogenous (viral) 6HB, we performed thermal denaturation studies using mixtures of synthetic N and C peptides corresponding to wild-type HR (Nw or Cw, respectively), HR containing the N or C resistance mutations (Nm or Cm, respectively), and the selecting N peptide (N44*). All N- and C-peptide mixtures showed circular dichroic spectra with high
-helical content (not shown), consistent with previous reports (24). The wild-type peptide pair (NwCw) was trimeric as determined by sedimentation equilibrium (not shown), and thermal denaturation studies showed that the 6HB exhibited a simple two-state unfolding, with a Tm of
55°C (Fig. 4). The melting temperature is considerably lower than other reported measurements for the HIV-1 or simian immunodeficiency virus core gp41 domains (24). This may be due in part to the use of relatively long N peptides that extend beyond contacts with the C peptides. The peptide pairs involving the N44* peptide exhibited complex unfolding, with more than one transition observed. For the N44*Cw and N44*Cm peptide mixtures, these transitions occurred in the ranges of 43 to 49°C and 52 to 57°C, respectively (Fig. 4). The comparatively decreased thermal stabilities of 6HB interactions involving the N44* peptide are likely due to the isoleucine-to-glycine substitution in the second residue of the inhibitor, which may have facilitated the development of resistance.
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FIG. 4. Thermal denaturation studies of equimolar mixtures of the N and C peptides. Circular dichroism measurements were recorded at 222 nm as a function of temperature. Two independent experiments gave identical results. The melting curves for N44*Cw and N44*Cm are indicated by the open and closed squares, respectively; the identities of the other curves are as indicated.
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What do these findings tell us about mechanisms of resistance and Env-mediated fusion? In theory, several mechanisms of resistance to peptide fusion inhibitors are possible. In one case, resistance could occur directly by mutation of contact residues that impair inhibitor binding, as has been suggested for some T20-resistant viruses (31, 36). Alternatively, resistance could arise indirectly, by reducing inhibitor access or competitiveness to the binding site. Reduced access could reflect (i) steric issues or (ii) decreased time that the binding site is available to the inhibitor due to kinetics of conformational changes and fusion. Reduced inhibitor competitiveness could occur by making contacts in the endogenous 6HB more favorable than those involving the inhibitor. In the case of our escape mutant, our results appear to rule out the direct mechanism. The cross-resistance against the N- and C-peptide inhibitors argues against resistance being due to mutation of contact residues, because the N and C peptides make distinct contacts with gp41. Molecular modeling also does not support a model in which the resistance mutations impair helical interactions. Most convincing, the thermal denaturation studies indicate that the resistance mutations could actually stabilize 6HB interactions rather than destabilize them.
The biophysical experiments introduce thermodynamic considerations into the discussion of resistance. In our peptide models of the 6HB (Fig. 4), the resistance mutations increased the structural stability of the resistant 6HB (NmCm) relative to the wild-type (sensitive) 6HB (NwCw). Interestingly, the mutation in the (noncognate) N-HR benefits the endogenous 6HB (NmCm), but it cannot benefit the 6HB formed by N44* binding to the C-HR (N44*Cm). It thus appears that the virus evolved a way to improve endogenous 6HB stability without improving inhibitor binding. The relevance of this pathway as a mechanism of resistance is supported by a recent study of a patient who developed resistance to T20 (Enfuvirtide) by generating point mutations in the N- and C-HRs (2). Although the mutations reported by Baldwin et al. (2) differ from those described here, it is striking that in vivo resistance to T20 (a C-peptide inhibitor) involved a mutation in the noncognate C-HR that resulted in a 3°C improvement in stability of the resistant 6HB, analogous to our in vitro findings involving an N-peptide fusion inhibitor.
Thermodynamic arguments relating to peptide inhibition suggest a model in which peptide is in direct competition with the endogenous HR at some step of the fusion process. With respect to the increased stability of the resistant 6HB, our data are consistent with an equilibrium model of inhibition by peptide proposed by Caffrey et al. (4). Alternatively, it is thought that the free energy released during formation of 6HB helps overcome the free energy barrier for membrane fusion (27). Stabilization of the endogenous 6HB could simply release more energy to promote fusion pore stabilization and expansion that are needed for complete membrane merge (26), resulting in faster fusion kinetics and less time for the inhibitor to bind. Further experiments are under way to dissect the thermodynamic parameters contributing to enhanced stability of the resistant 6HB and its consequences for resistance.
Our data also support kinetic parameters in the development of resistance. In fact, the biophysical experiments showing that the 6HB involving the N44* peptide inhibitor is less stable than the sensitive (WT) 6HB (NwCw Tm > N44*Cw Tm) indicate that free energy considerations alone do not control inhibition, because N44* remains a potent inhibitor against WT virus. Rather, the data support a kinetic mechanism in which the inhibitor has preferential access to the gp41 target sites during refolding steps in virus entry. Experiments involving sCD4 further suggest kinetic parameters in resistance. In two different strains of HIV, the N mutation altered sensitivity to sCD4, indicating changes in the activation energy for the transition from native to fusion intermediate conformations. For the JR-CSF Env, which is much more resistant to sCD4 than the HXB2 Env, the N mutation increased sensitivity to sCD4, perhaps by destabilizing the native conformation. However, the opposite pattern was observed for the HXB2 Env, which is already easy to activate. This apparent discrepancy is difficult to interpret, but it is tempting to hypothesize that there is an optimal range of Env triggering that reduces the kinetic window for the inhibitor to bind Env. For the JR-CSF Env, easier receptor activation might allow more Env proteins to trigger and organize into fusion pores, speeding up fusion and acquisition of the peptide-resistant 6HB. For the HXB2 Env, reduced hair-trigger activation and consequent premature inactivation of Env might also lead to more efficient fusion kinetics. In this way the N mutation could influence the kinetics of fusion and the time available for the inhibitor to bind gp41. A kinetic model of fusion that is modulated by receptor density and affinity has been previously proposed to explain sensitivity to peptide fusion inhibitors (30).
Indirect models of resistance offer an appealing strategy of escape for dominant-negative inhibitors. Dominant-negative inhibitors mimic interactions in the target protein and would be expected to impose constraints on the development of resistance; mutations that impair inhibitor binding would also likely impair function of the target protein. It is likely that C-HR mutations that reduce binding to N peptides would also destabilize the 6HB comprised of endogenous HR (37). Such destabilizing mutations would also likely reduce infectivity of the mutant virus. A correlation between decreased 6HB stability and reduced infectivity has been reported for other mutations in gp41 (16, 22). Yet T20-resistant viruses can acquire resistance by mutating residues that directly impair peptide binding (2, 31, 36). A stretch of the N-HR including the GIV sequence has been shown to be important for T20 binding to gp41, and this region is frequently mutated in resistant isolates from T20-treated patients (1, 2, 38). A recent clinical study reported that T20-resistant viruses are less fit (23). Residues outside the N-HR, including gp120 sequences, however, have also been shown to modulate sensitivity to T20 (10, 11, 19, 29, 42). Given the mutability of Env, it is likely that several pathways for resistance can emerge, and a pathway may involve several factors that contribute to resistance.
Aside from providing insights into mechanisms of resistance, our escape mutant virus also identified residue 577 as having a role in both activation of Env-mediated fusion and stability of the 6HB. Thus, residue 577 helps to regulate more than one conformation of Env, including the fusogenic 6HB conformation and the native or fusion-intermediate conformations that influence Env activation. This dual effect appears to be analogous to the conformational switch region that has been recently described for the fusion protein (F) of a paramyxovirus (34), in which a region near the C-HR regulates both activation of F-mediated fusion and 6HB stability. Residues in the N-HR region of gp41 have previously been reported to be important for contacts with gp120 (6, 16, 25), further supporting the idea that this residue may be involved in a conformational switch. Notably, residue 577 lies in a hydrophobic pocket region of the N-HR, which has been proposed to be an important region for stabilizing the coiled coil (13) and a good target for developing inhibitors (7). The demonstration that residue 577 tolerates substitutions (40, 41), and indeed mutates under selection as shown here, has implications for drugs targeting this pocket.
In summary, our studies identify new viral determinants that confer cross-resistance to N- and C-type peptide fusion inhibitors and change susceptibility to inhibitors mimicking CD4. The N mutation, which altered sensitivity to sCD4, also shows that this region of N-HR can play a dual role in both receptor activation and 6HB stability. The combined N and C mutations confer more resistance against several inhibitors than the individual mutations (Table 1) and point to an indirect mechanism of resistance, where coupled changes in the N- and C-HRs may regulate several aspects of Env-mediated fusion to provide escape from a dominant-negative inhibitor. The importance of residues 577 and 648 in the development of resistance to peptide fusion inhibitors and the fusion process was not predicted from the 6HB high-resolution structures. Our findings underscore the complexity and plasticity of Env-mediated fusion and some of the challenges in designing fusion inhibitors.
This work was supported in part by an Intramural AIDS-Targeted Antiviral Program (IATAP) grant from the National Institutes of Health.
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