| Literature DB >> 23028968 |
Robert A Smith1, Dana N Raugi, Charlotte Pan, Matthew Coyne, Alexandra Hernandez, Brad Church, Kara Parker, James I Mullins, Papa Salif Sow, Geoffrey S Gottlieb.
Abstract
Human immunodeficiency virus type 2 (HIV-2) is intrinsically resistant to non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors and exhibits reduced susceptibility to several of the protease inhibitors used for antiretroviral therapy of HIV-1. Thus, there is a pressing need to identify new classes of antiretroviral agents that are active against HIV-2. Although recent data suggest that the integrase strand transfer inhibitors raltegravir and elvitegravir may be beneficial, mutations that are known to confer resistance to these drugs in HIV-1 have been reported in HIV-2 sequences from patients receiving raltegravir-containing regimens. To examine the phenotypic effects of mutations that emerge during raltegravir treatment, we constructed a panel of HIV-2 integrase variants using site-directed mutagenesis and measured the susceptibilities of the mutant strains to raltegravir and elvitegravir in culture. The effects of single and multiple amino acid changes on HIV-2 replication capacity were also evaluated. Our results demonstrate that secondary replacements in the integrase protein play key roles in the development of integrase inhibitor resistance in HIV-2. Collectively, our data define three major mutational pathways to high-level raltegravir and elvitegravir resistance: i) E92Q+Y143C or T97A+Y143C, ii) G140S+Q148R, and iii) E92Q+N155H. These findings preclude the sequential use of raltegravir and elvitegravir (or vice versa) for HIV-2 treatment and provide important information for clinical monitoring of integrase inhibitor resistance in HIV-2-infected individuals.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23028968 PMCID: PMC3445448 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0045372
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Amino acid changes observed in integrase sequences from raltegravir-treated HIV-2 patients.
| Author, year, reference | Number of patients studied | Primary INSTI-associated changes observed | Additional changes reported |
| Garrett et al., 2008, | 1 | N155H | none |
| Roquebert et al., 2008, | 1 | Q148K, Q148R | none |
| Salgado et al., 2009, | 1 | N155H | A33A/G, H51H/R, V72I, I84V, A153G, N160K, S163S/G |
| Xu et al., 2009, | 1 | N155H, E92Q+N155H, T97A+Y143C | E92G, Q91R, S147G, A153G, H157R, M183I |
| Charpentier et al., 2011, | 7 | T97A+Y143C | none |
| Treviño et. al, 2011, | 3 | N155H, E92Q, T97A | A153G, S163G/D |
Patients that did not receive raltegravir-containing treatment are not included in this table.
Genotypic analyses were performed on consensus (bulk) sequences unless otherwise indicated.
These changes appeared in cloned PCR products amplified from a single patient.
This combination of replacements was observed in two study subjects.
Replacements listed for Charpentier et al. are the changes observed at time of virologic failure. Upon further raltegravir treatment, the predominant genotypes in the two patients harboring Q148K/R changed to G140S+Q148R, and the consensus sequence of the patient with E92E/Q+Y143H/R+N155H changed to E92E/A/P/Q+N155H.
N155H variants emerged in two study subjects. The exact combinations of changes were not specified.
Figure 1Single-cycle replication capacities of HIV-2 integrase variants.
Each datum point is the infectious titer [MAGIC-5A focus-forming units (FFU)/ml] produced by an independent transfection of full-length HIV-2 plasmid DNA into 293T-17 cells. Bars indicate the mean titers for each wild-type (WT) or mutant strain. Light-grey bars indicate variants that are significantly different from WT (P>0.05) and * indicates a significant difference between Q148R and G140S+Q148R HIV-2 (P>0.01) (ANOVA of log10-transformed titers with Tukey’s post-test). Filled and open circles represent the titers produced by two independent plasmid DNA preparations for each genotype; titers from a third preparation of wild-type DNA are shown as inverted triangles. Error bars indicate standard deviations.
Figure 2Susceptibility of HIV-2 integrase variants to raltegravir (RAL) and elvitegravir (EVG).
Panels A and C show the EC50 values for wild-type (WT) HIV-2 ROD9 and each of 13 site-directed ROD9 integrase mutants tested against raltegravir and elvitegravir, respectively. Bars indicate the means of three or more independent dose-response experiments. Light, medium and dark-colored bars indicate low-level, moderate, and highlevel resistance (mean EC50 values 2–5-fold, 6–15-fold and >15-fold relative to wild-type, respectively). With the exception of Q148H versus raltegravir and Y143C versus elvitegravir, EC50 values for all strains shown in color were statistically greater than the corresponding values for wild-type ROD9 (P>0.05, ANOVA of log10-transformed EC50 values with Tukey's post-test). EC50 values for T97A and G140S did not statistically differ from WT for either drug. Panels B and D show representative dose-response data for WT, Q148R, and G140S+Q148R versus raltegravir and WT, N155H, and E92Q+N155H versus elvitegravir, respectively. Titers are expressed as the percentage of those seen in the absence of drug (i.e., % of solvent-only controls) and are the means of three independent cultures at each drug concentration. Error bars in all panels indicate standard deviations.