| Literature DB >> 20071590 |
Origène Nyanguile1, Benoit Devogelaere, Leen Vijgen, Walter Van den Broeck, Frederik Pauwels, Maxwell D Cummings, Hendrik L De Bondt, Ann M Vos, Jan M Berke, Oliver Lenz, Geneviève Vandercruyssen, Katrien Vermeiren, Wendy Mostmans, Pascale Dehertogh, Frédéric Delouvroy, Sandrine Vendeville, Koen VanDyck, Koen Dockx, Erna Cleiren, Pierre Raboisson, Kenneth A Simmen, Gregory C Fanning.
Abstract
The RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (NS5B) of hepatitis C virus (HCV) is an unusually attractive target for drug discovery since it contains five distinct drugable sites. The success of novel antiviral therapies will require nonnucleoside inhibitors to be active in at least patients infected with HCV of subtypes 1a and 1b. Therefore, the genotypic assessment of these agents against clinical isolates derived from genotype 1-infected patients is an important prerequisite for the selection of suitable candidates for clinical development. Here we report the 1a/1b subtype profiling of polymerase inhibitors that bind at each of the four known nonnucleoside binding sites. We show that inhibition of all of the clinical isolates tested is maintained, except for inhibitors that bind at the palm-1 binding site. Subtype coverage varies across chemotypes within this class of inhibitors, and inhibition of genotype 1a improves when hydrophobic contact with the polymerase is increased. We investigated if the polymorphism of the palm-1 binding site is the sole cause of the reduced susceptibility of subtype 1a to inhibition by 1,5-benzodiazepines by using reverse genetics, X-ray crystallography, and surface plasmon resonance studies. We showed Y415F to be a key determinant in conferring resistance on subtype 1a, with this effect being mediated through an inhibitor- and enzyme-bound water molecule. Binding studies revealed that the mechanism of subtype 1a resistance is faster dissociation of the inhibitor from the enzyme.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20071590 PMCID: PMC2826027 DOI: 10.1128/JVI.01980-09
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Virol ISSN: 0022-538X Impact factor: 5.103