Literature DB >> 32822695

Probing Vulnerability of the gp41 C-Terminal Heptad Repeat as Target for Miniprotein HIV Inhibitors.

Samuel Jurado1, Christiane Moog2, Mario Cano-Muñoz1, Sylvie Schmidt2, Géraldine Laumond2, Valentina Ruocco1, Sara Standoli1, Daniel Polo-Megías1, Francisco Conejero-Lara3, Bertrand Morel4.   

Abstract

One of the therapeutic strategies in HIV neutralization is blocking membrane fusion. In this process, tight interaction between the N-terminal and C-terminal heptad-repeat (NHR and CHR) regions of gp41 is essential to promote membranes apposition and merging. We have previously developed single-chain proteins (named covNHR) that accurately mimic the complete gp41 NHR region in its trimeric conformation. They tightly bind CHR-derived peptides and show a potent and broad HIV inhibitory activity in vitro. However, the extremely high binding affinity (sub-picomolar) is not in consonance with their inhibitory activity (nanomolar), likely due to partial or temporal accessibility of their target in the virus. Here, we have designed and characterized two single-chain covNHR miniproteins each encompassing one of the two halves of the NHR region and containing two of the four sub-pockets of the NHR crevice. The two miniproteins fold as trimeric helical bundles as expected but while the C-terminal covNHR (covNHR-C) miniprotein is highly stable, the N-terminal counterpart (covNHR-N) shows only marginal stability that could be improved by engineering an internal disulfide bond. Both miniproteins bind their respective complementary CHR peptides with moderate (micromolar) affinity. Moreover, the covNHR-N miniproteins can access their target in the context of trimeric native envelope proteins and show significant inhibitory activity for several HIV pseudoviruses. In contrast, covNHR-C cannot bind its target sequence and neither inhibits HIV, indicating a higher vulnerability of C-terminal part of CHR. These results may guide the development of novel HIV inhibitors targeting the gp41 CHR region.
Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  binding affinity; coiled-coil; envelope glycoprotein; fusion inhibitors; hydrophobic pocket

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Year:  2020        PMID: 32822695     DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2020.08.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mol Biol        ISSN: 0022-2836            Impact factor:   5.469


  3 in total

1.  Extremely Thermostabilizing Core Mutations in Coiled-Coil Mimetic Proteins of HIV-1 gp41 Produce Diverse Effects on Target Binding but Do Not Affect Their Inhibitory Activity.

Authors:  Mario Cano-Muñoz; Samuele Cesaro; Bertrand Morel; Julie Lucas; Christiane Moog; Francisco Conejero-Lara
Journal:  Biomolecules       Date:  2021-04-12

2.  Conformational Stabilization of Gp41-Mimetic Miniproteins Opens Up New Ways of Inhibiting HIV-1 Fusion.

Authors:  Mario Cano-Muñoz; Julie Lucas; Li-Yun Lin; Samuele Cesaro; Christiane Moog; Francisco Conejero-Lara
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2022-03-03       Impact factor: 5.923

3.  Novel chimeric proteins mimicking SARS-CoV-2 spike epitopes with broad inhibitory activity.

Authors:  Mario Cano-Muñoz; Daniel Polo-Megías; Ana Cámara-Artigas; José A Gavira; María J López-Rodríguez; Géraldine Laumond; Sylvie Schmidt; Julien Demiselle; Seiamak Bahram; Christiane Moog; Francisco Conejero-Lara
Journal:  Int J Biol Macromol       Date:  2022-10-08       Impact factor: 8.025

  3 in total

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