4.6 Article

In Vitro Selection of Highly Darunavir-Resistant and Replication-Competent HIV-1 Variants by Using a Mixture of Clinical HIV-1 Isolates Resistant to Multiple Conventional Protease Inhibitors

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 84, Issue 22, Pages 11961-11969

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.00967-10

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Funding

  1. Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health
  2. National Institutes of Health [GM 53386]
  3. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS-RFTF) [97L00705]
  4. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology of Japan
  5. Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare of Japan

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We attempted to select HIV-1 variants resistant to darunavir (DRV), which potently inhibits the enzymatic activity and dimerization of protease and has a high genetic barrier to HIV-1 development of resistance to DRV. We conducted selection using a mixture of 8 highly multi-protease inhibitor (PI)-resistant, DRV-susceptible clinical HIV-1 variants (HIV-1(MIX)) containing 9 to 14 PI resistance-associated amino acid substitutions in protease. HIV-1MIX became highly resistant to DRV, with a 50% effective concentration (EC50) similar to 333-fold greater than that against HIV-1(NL4-3). HIV-1(MIX) at passage 51 (HIV-1(MIXP51)) replicated well in the presence of 5 mu M DRV and contained 14 mutations. HIV-1(MIXP51) was highly resistant to amprenavir, indinavir, nelfinavir, ritonavir, lopinavir, and atazanavir and moderately resistant to saquinavir and tipranavir. HIV-1(MIXP51) had a resemblance with HIV-1(C) of the HIV-1(MIX) population, and selection using HIV-1(C) was also performed; however, its DRV resistance acquisition was substantially delayed. The H219Q and I223V substitutions in Gag, lacking in HIV-1(CP51), likely contributed to conferring a replication advantage on HIV-1(MIXP51) by reducing intravirion cyclophilin A content. HIV-1(MIXP51) apparently acquired the substitutions from another HIV-1 strain(s) of HIV-1(MIX) through possible homologous recombination. The present data suggest that the use of multiple drug-resistant HIV-1 isolates is of utility in selecting drug-resistant variants and that DRV would not easily permit HIV-1 to develop significant resistance; however, HIV-1 can develop high levels of DRV resistance when a variety of PI-resistant HIV-1 strains are generated, as seen in patients experiencing sequential PI failure, and ensuing homologous recombination takes place. HIV-1(MIXP51) should be useful in elucidating the mechanisms of HIV-1 resistance to DRV and related agents.

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