| Literature DB >> 27721488 |
Kevin K Ariën1, Françoise Baleux2, Delphine Desjardins3,4,5, Françoise Porrot6, Yves-Marie Coïc2, Johan Michiels1, Kawthar Bouchemal7, David Bonnaffé8, Timothée Bruel6, Olivier Schwartz6, Roger Le Grand3,4,5, Guido Vanham1,9, Nathalie Dereuddre-Bosquet3,4,5, Hugues Lortat-Jacob10.
Abstract
The CD4 and the cryptic coreceptor binding sites of the HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein are key to viral attachment and entry. We developed new molecules comprising a CD4 mimetic peptide linked to anionic compounds (mCD4.1-HS12 and mCD4.1-PS1), that block the CD4-gp120 interaction and simultaneously induce the exposure of the cryptic coreceptor binding site, rendering it accessible to HS12- or PS1- mediated inhibition. Using a cynomolgus macaque model of vaginal challenge with SHIV162P3, we report that mCD4.1-PS1, formulated into a hydroxyethyl-cellulose gel provides 83% protection (5/6 animals). We next engineered the mCD4 moiety of the compound, giving rise to mCD4.2 and mCD4.3 that, when conjugated to PS1, inhibited cell-free and cell-associated HIV-1 with particularly low IC50, in the nM to pM range, including some viral strains that were resistant to the parent molecule mCD4.1. These chemically defined molecules, which target major sites of vulnerability of gp120, are stable for at least 48 hours in conditions replicating the vaginal milieu (37 °C, pH 4.5). They efficiently mimic several large gp120 ligands, including CD4, coreceptor or neutralizing antibodies, to which their efficacy compares very favorably, despite a molecular mass reduced to 5500 Da. Together, these results support the development of such molecules as potential microbicides.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27721488 PMCID: PMC5056392 DOI: 10.1038/srep34829
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Antiviral activity of mCD4.1, mCD4.1-HS12 and mCD4.1-PS1.
| Viral strains | Clade-tropism | mCD4.1 (nM) | mCD4.1-HS12 (nM) | mCD4.1-PS1 (nM) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| VI820 | A-X4R5 | 1686 | 34 | 25 |
| Bal | B-R5 | 237 | 90 | 0.54 |
| IIIB | B-X4 | 29 | 0.05 | 0.013 |
| MN | B-X4 | 20 | 1.2 | 0.09 |
| SF162 | B-R5 | 130 | 10 | 0.11 |
| SHIV162P3 | B-R5 | 5372 | 706 | 36 |
| pREJO.c/2864 cl2 | T/F B-R5 | 108 | 18 | 0.66 |
| pTHRO.c/2626 | T/F B-R5 | 1181 | 689 | 91 |
| pWITO.c/2474 | T/F B-R5 | 1116 | 124 | 6.9 |
| VI829 | C-R5 | >10000 | 829 | 16 |
| p246F10 | T/F C-R5 | >10000 | 874 | 723 |
| pZM247Fv2 | T/F C-R5 | >10000 | >1000 | 3696 |
| VI824 | D-R5 | 3176 | 282 | 40 |
| VI1888 (CRF01) | AE-R5 | >10000 | >1000 | 1102 |
| Ca10-3 (CRF01) | AE-X4 | 96 | 9 | 0.57 |
| MP568 (CRF02) | AG-R5 | 7931 | 879 | 310 |
| CC50 | 45525 | >9000 | >37500 |
Replication competent HIV-1 viruses and SHIV162P3 were incubated with a range of concentrations of the mCD4.1 derived compounds and TZM-bl cells for 48 h. Infection was determined by luciferase activity, from which IC50 (expressed in nM) was calculated in GraphPad Prism 5.03 using non-linear regression. Values are means of two experiments. (T/F transmitted founder virus; X4: CXCR4 tropic; R5: CCR5 tropic, IC50: 50% inhibitory concentration; CC50: 50% cytotoxic concentration).
Figure 1Stability and macaque pharmacokinetics.
The mCD4.1-PS1 (diamonds; starting purity 87%) and the mCD4.1-HS12 (circles; starting purity 98%) dissolved at 1 mg/ml in 10 mM sodium citrate buffer pH 4 was incubated at 37 °C and regularly injected on a C18 RP-HPLC column over a 46 hours period. The integrity of the molecule was followed by monitoring its elution time using a 23–33% linear gradient of acetonitrile in 50 mM triethylamine acetate buffer and represented as mCD4.1-conjugates % content (A). Active mCD4.1-PS1 concentration measured in the vaginal fluid of two macaques at various times following vaginal administration of mCD4.1-PS1 formulated at 36 (B), 144 (C) or 600 (D) μM in a 1.5% HEC gel.
Figure 2Efficacy of mCD4.1-PS1 formulated in HEC gel to prevent vaginal transmission of SHIV162P3 in macaques.
Plasma viral load in SHIV162P3 challenged macaques treated with placebo gel (A) or gel containing mCD4.1-PS1 at 144 μM (B) or 600 μM (C). Each gel formulation was applied into the vaginal vault of six naïve female cynomolgus macaques 1 hour before the challenge performed with ~10 AID50 of SHIV162P3 inoculated in 50% human seminal plasma. Plasma viremia were measured regularly for 11 weeks by quantitative RT-PCR. The dotted line on the y-axis represents the 111 RNA copies/mL quantification limit.
Figure 3Kinetic analysis of the binding of mCD4-PS1 conjugates to gp120.
Surface plasmon resonance sensorgrams measured when mCD4.1-PS1 (A,B), mCD4.2-PS1 (C,D) or mCD4.3-PS1 (E,F) at 5, 2.5, 1.25, 0.62, 0.31 and 0.15 nM (from top to bottom), were injected on HIV-1 MN (A,C,E) or YU2 (B,D,F) gp120. The binding response in RU was recorded as a function of time (colored curves), and fitted to a Langmuir binding model (black curves).
Antiviral activity of mCD4.2, mCD4.3 and mCD4-conjugates in comparison with mAb VRC01, b12 and the NNRTI dapivirine.
| Viral strains | Clade-tropism | mCD4.2 (nM) | mCD4.2 PS1(nM) | mCD4.3 (nM) | mCD4.3PS1 (nM) | mAb VRC01 (nM) | mAb b12 (nM) | TMC120 Dapivirine (nM) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| VI820 | A-X4R5 | 6.1 | 0.031 | 4.2 | 0.024 | 12 | >100 | 2 |
| Bal | B-R5 | 2 | 0.035 | 2.3 | 0.031 | 0.64 | 1 | 1.7 |
| IIIB | B-X4 | 0.22 | 0.0073 | 0.16 | 0.0025 | 0.64 | 0.09 | 0.84 |
| MN | B-X4 | 0.59 | 0.046 | 0.37 | 0.026 | 2 | 1.5 | 1.5 |
| SF162 | B-R5 | 1.3 | 0.01 | 0.66 | 0.0075 | 5.2 | 0.36 | 1.3 |
| SHIV162P3 | B-R5 | 69 | 2.2 | 29 | 1.4 | 8.2 | 6 | >1000 |
| pREJO.c/2864 cl2 | T/F B-R5 | 76 | 0.28 | 46 | 0.28 | 0.77 | >100 | 1.6 |
| pTHRO.c/2626 | T/F B-R5 | 19 | 8.9 | 15 | 6.4 | >100 | 35 | 1.9 |
| pWITO.c/2474 | T/F B-R5 | 184 | 1.3 | 178 | 1.5 | 2 | >100 | 1.1 |
| VI829 | C-R5 | 512 | 4 | 221 | 3.6 | 9.3 | >100 | 1.3 |
| P246F10 | T/F C-R5 | 718 | 58 | 510 | 33 | 85 | >100 | 1.4 |
| pZM247Fv2 | T/F C-R5 | >1000 | 206 | >1000 | 192 | 5.7 | >100 | 2.3 |
| VI824 | D-R5 | 56 | 0.68 | 39 | 0.7 | >100 | >100 | 1.2 |
| VI1888 (CRF01) | AE-R5 | 5382 | 1064 | 4509 | 1212 | 16 | 80 | 2.1 |
| Ca10-3 (CRF01) | AE-X4 | 4.7 | 0.12 | 3.1 | 0.076 | 13 | >100 | 1.2 |
| MP568 (CRF02) | AG-R5 | 155 | 4.9 | 204 | 4.2 | 54 | >100 | 1.1 |
| CC50 | 24036 | >50000 | 15540 | >50000 | >100 | >300 | 2524 |
Various replication competent HIV-1 or SHIV162P3 viruses at 10−3 MOI were incubated with a range of concentrations of the indicated compounds and TZM-bl cells for 48 h. Infection was determined as explained in the methods section. IC50 values (expressed in nM) represent the mean of at least 2 independent experiments, each with triplicate measurements and were calculated in GraphPad Prism 5.03 using non-linear regression. (T/F transmitted founder virus; X4: CXCR4 tropic; R5: CCR5 tropic, IC50: 50% inhibitory concentration; CC50: 50% cytotoxic concentration).
Figure 4mCD4-conjugates inhibit cell-cell transmission and bind cell-associated HIV-1 Env.
(A) HIV cell-cell transmission. Primary CD4 T-cells were infected with the X4-tropic HIV-1 strain NL4.3 and co-cultivated with dye-labeled autologous uninfected CD4 T-cells, in the presence of indicated amounts of inhibitors. After 72 h of culture, the infection of target cells (fraction of Gag+ cells) was measured by flow cytometry. Data are mean ± SEM of three independent experiments, with 100% corresponding to the levels of Gag+ targets in the absence of inhibitor. (B) IC50 (in nM) of the inhibitors calculated with the dose-response, at two different time points (48 and 72 h). (C) HIV-1 Env surface levels. CEM-NKR cells infected with HIV-1 NL4.3 were exposed to mCD4.2-PS1 (1 μM) for 10 min at 37 °C and then stained with an antibody targeting the HIV-1 Env CD4 binding site (3BNC117). Binding was examined by flow cytometry. One representative experiment out of three is shown.