4.6 Article

Biophysical Characterization of Novel DNA Aptamers against K103N/Y181C Double Mutant HIV-1 Reverse Transcriptase

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 27, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules27010285

Keywords

HIV-1 RT; DNA aptamer; K103N; Y181C double mutant; gold nanoparticles; SPR; NMR; cytotoxicity and pseudo-HIV particles

Funding

  1. Royal Golden Jubilee PhD Program [PHD/0049/2559]

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This research identified the KY44 aptamer as a potential inhibitor of both wildtype and mutant forms of HIV-RT. The aptamer showed low cytotoxicity and inhibited pseudo-HIV particle infection.
The human immunodeficiency virus type-1 Reverse Transcriptase (HIV-1 RT) plays a pivotal role in essential viral replication and is the main target for antiviral therapy. The anti-HIV-1 RT drugs address resistance-associated mutations. This research focused on isolating the potential specific DNA aptamers against K103N/Y181C double mutant HIV-1 RT. Five DNA aptamers showed low IC50 values against both the KY-mutant HIV-1 RT and wildtype (WT) HIV-1 RT. The kinetic binding affinity forms surface plasmon resonance of both KY-mutant and WT HIV-1 RTs in the range of 0.06-2 mu M and 0.15-2 mu M, respectively. Among these aptamers, the KY44 aptamer was chosen to study the interaction of HIV-1 RTs-DNA aptamer complex by NMR experiments. The NMR results indicate that the aptamer could interact with both WT and KY-mutant HIV-1 RT at the NNRTI drug binding pocket by inducing a chemical shift at methionine residues. Furthermore, KY44 could inhibit pseudo-HIV particle infection in HEK293 cells with nearly 80% inhibition and showed low cytotoxicity on HEK293 cells. These together indicated that the KY44 aptamer could be a potential inhibitor of both WT and KY-mutant HIV-RT.

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