Immunodeficiency virus protease

From Proteopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 11: Line 11:
===Medical Implications===
===Medical Implications===
-
There currently is no cure or vaccine against HIV. Researchers, however, have discovered treatments that can halt and even reverse the progression of AIDS, due in large part to our understanding of the structure of HIV-1 protease. <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Saquinavir/4'>Saquinavir</scene> ([[Invirase]]) was the first protease inhibitor approved by the FDA for the treatment of HIV. It inhibits HIV protease by <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Saquinavir_tunnel/1'>binding tightly in the active site tunnel</scene>, preventing the binding of polyproteins. Its chemical structure mimics the tetrahedral intermediate of the hydrolytic reaction, thereby <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Saquinavir_cat/3'>interacting strongly with the catalytic Asp residues</scene>.<ref>PMID:17243183</ref> Saquinavir is essentially an uncleavable ligand, as indicated by the <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Hiv_morph2/9'> similar conformational changes in the protease flaps </scene> on binding saquinavir or a polypeptide . Resistance to saquinavir is due to alterations in the HIV protease sequence, including the mutation of <scene name='31/315240/Saquinavir_mut/1'>Leu 10 and Ile 50</scene><ref>PMID: 8969180</ref>. Other drugs used to treat HIV infection that inhibit <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Inhibitor_intro/1'>HIV protease</scene> include <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Indinavir/2'>Indinavir </scene> ([[Crixivan]]), <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Ritonavir/1'>Ritonavir</scene> ([[Norvir]]), and <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Nelfinavir/2'>Nelfinavir</scene> ([[Viracept]]).
+
There currently is no cure or vaccine against HIV. Researchers, however, have discovered treatments that can halt and even reverse the progression of AIDS, due in large part to our understanding of the structure of HIV-1 protease. <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Saquinavir/4'>Saquinavir</scene> ([[Invirase]]) was the first protease inhibitor approved by the FDA for the treatment of HIV. It inhibits HIV protease by <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Saquinavir_tunnel/1'>binding tightly in the active site tunnel</scene>, preventing the binding of polyproteins. Its chemical structure mimics the tetrahedral intermediate of the hydrolytic reaction, thereby <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Saquinavir_cat/3'>interacting strongly with the catalytic Asp residues</scene>.<ref>PMID:17243183</ref> Saquinavir is essentially an uncleavable ligand, as indicated by the <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Hiv_morph2/9'> similar conformational changes in the protease flaps </scene> on binding saquinavir or a polypeptide . Resistance to saquinavir is due to alterations in the HIV protease sequence, including the mutation of <scene name='31/315240/Saquinavir_mut/1'>Leu 10 and Ile 50</scene><ref>PMID: 8969180</ref>. Other drugs used to treat HIV infection that inhibit <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Inhibitor_intro/1'>HIV protease</scene> include <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Indinavir/2'>Indinavir </scene> ([[Crixivan]]), <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Ritonavir/1'>Ritonavir</scene> ([[Norvir]]), [[Saquinavir]] and <scene name='User:David_Canner/Sandbox_HIV/Nelfinavir/2'>Nelfinavir</scene> ([[Viracept]]).
=== Structural Insights into the South African HIV-1 Subtype C Protease: Impact of hinge region dynamics and flap flexibility in drug resistance <ref>doi 10.1080/07391102.2012.736774</ref>===
=== Structural Insights into the South African HIV-1 Subtype C Protease: Impact of hinge region dynamics and flap flexibility in drug resistance <ref>doi 10.1080/07391102.2012.736774</ref>===

Revision as of 10:37, 21 February 2016

Structure of HIV Protease (PDB code 2nmz)

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

3D Structures of HIV-1 protease

  1. Virus protease

Additional Resources

For additional information, see: Human Immunodeficiency Virus

References

  1. Tie Y, Kovalevsky AY, Boross P, Wang YF, Ghosh AK, Tozser J, Harrison RW, Weber IT. Atomic resolution crystal structures of HIV-1 protease and mutants V82A and I84V with saquinavir. Proteins. 2007 Apr 1;67(1):232-42. PMID:17243183 doi:10.1002/prot.21304
  2. Maschera B, Darby G, Palu G, Wright LL, Tisdale M, Myers R, Blair ED, Furfine ES. Human immunodeficiency virus. Mutations in the viral protease that confer resistance to saquinavir increase the dissociation rate constant of the protease-saquinavir complex. J Biol Chem. 1996 Dec 27;271(52):33231-5. PMID:8969180
  3. Naicker P, Achilonu I, Fanucchi S, Fernandes M, Ibrahim MA, Dirr HW, Soliman ME, Sayed Y. Structural insights into the South African HIV-1 subtype C protease: impact of hinge region dynamics and flap flexibility in drug resistance. J Biomol Struct Dyn. 2012 Nov 12. PMID:23140382 doi:10.1080/07391102.2012.736774
Personal tools