4.7 Article

Mechanism of Darunavir (DRV)'s High Genetic Barrier to HIV-1 Resistance: A Key V32I Substitution in Protease Rarely Occurs, but Once It Occurs, It Predisposes HIV-1 To Develop DRV Resistance

Journal

MBIO
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/mBio.02425-17

Keywords

darunavir; genetic barrier; drug resistance; dual mechanism; HIV-1; V32I; protease inhibitors

Categories

Funding

  1. Intramural Research Program of the Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health
  2. Ministry of Health, Welfare, and Labor of Japan
  3. Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (AMED)
  4. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology (MEXT)
  5. National Center for Global Health and Medicine (NCGM) Research Institute
  6. National Institutes of Health [GM53386]
  7. Platform Project for Supporting Drug Discovery and Life Science Research (Platform for Drug Discovery, Informatics, and Structural Life Science) - MEXT
  8. Platform Project for Supporting Drug Discovery and Life Science Research (Platform for Drug Discovery, Informatics, and Structural Life Science) - AMED

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Darunavir (DRV) has bimodal activity against HIV-1 protease, enzymatic inhibition and protease dimerization inhibition, and has an extremely high genetic barrier against development of drug resistance. We previously generated a highly DRV-resistant HIV-1 variant (HIVDRVRP51). We also reported that four amino acid substitutions (V32I, L33F, I54M, and I84V) identified in the protease of HIVDRVRP51 are largely responsible for its high-level resistance to DRV. Here, we attempted to elucidate the role of each of the four amino acid substitutions in the development of DRV resistance. We found that V32I is a key substitution, which rarely occurs, but once it occurs, it predisposes HIV-1 to develop high-level DRV resistance. When two infectious recombinant HIV-1 clones carrying I54M and I84V (rHIV(I54M) and rHIV(I84V), respectively) were selected in the presence of DRV, V32I emerged, and the virus rapidly developed high-level DRV resistance. rHIV(V32I) also developed high-level DRV resistance. However, wild-type HIVNL4-3 (rHIV(WT)) failed to acquire V32I and did not develop DRV resistance. Compared to rHIV(WT), rHIV(V32I) was highly susceptible to DRV and had significantly reduced fitness, explaining why V32I did not emerge upon selection of rHIV(WT) with DRV. When the only substitution is at residue 32, structural analysis revealed much stronger van der Waals interactions between DRV and I-32 than between DRV and V-32. These results suggest that V32I is a critical amino acid substitution in multiple pathways toward HIV-1's DRV resistance development and elucidate, at least in part, a mechanism of DRV's high genetic barrier to development of drug resistance. The results also show that attention should be paid to the initiation or continuation of DRV-containing regimens in people with HIV-1 containing the V32I substitution. IMPORTANCE Darunavir (DRV) is the only protease inhibitor (PI) recommended as a first-line therapeutic and represents the most widely used PI for treating HIV-1-infected individuals. DRV possesses a high genetic barrier to development of HIV-1's drug resistance. However, the mechanism(s) of the DRV's high genetic barrier remains unclear. Here, we show that the preexistence of certain single amino acid substitutions such as V32I, I54M, A71V, and I84V in HIV-1 protease facilitates the development of high-level DRV resistance. Interestingly, all in vitro-selected highly DRV-resistant HIV-1 variants acquired V32I but never emerged in wild-type HIV (HIVWT), and V32I itself rendered HIV-1 more sensitive to DRV and reduced viral fitness compared to HIVWT, strongly suggesting that the emergence of V32I plays a critical role in the development of HIV-1's resistance to DRV. Our results would be of benefit in the treatment of HIV-1-infected patients receiving DRV-containing regimens.

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