posted on 2012-02-14, 00:00authored byAyşegül Özen, Türkan Haliloğlu, Celia A. Schiffer
Drug resistance of HIV-1 protease alters the balance
in the molecular
recognition events in favor of substrate processing versus inhibitor
binding. To develop robust inhibitors targeting ensembles of drug-resistant
variants, the code of this balance needs to be cracked. For this purpose,
the principles governing the substrate recognition are required to
be revealed. Previous crystallographic studies on the WT protease–substrate
complexes showed that the substrates have a conserved consensus volume
in the protease active site despite their low sequence homology. This
consensus volume is termed as the substrate envelope. The substrate
envelope was recently reevaluated by taking the substrate dynamics
into account, and the dynamic substrate envelope was reported to better
define the substrate specificity for HIV-1 protease. Drug resistance
occurs mostly through mutations in the protease, occasionally accompanied
by cleavage site mutations. In this study, three coevolved protease–substrate
complexes (AP2VNC-p1V82A, LP1′Fp1-p6D30N/N88D, and SP3′Np1-p6D30N/N88D) were investigated for structural and dynamic properties by molecular
modeling and dynamics simulations. The results show the substrate
envelope is preserved by these cleavage site mutations in the presence
of drug-resistance mutations in the protease, if not enhanced. This
study on the conformational and mutational ensembles of protease–substrate
complexes validates the substrate envelope as the substrate recognition
motif for HIV-1 protease. The substrate envelope hypothesis allows
for the elucidation of possible drug resistance mutation patterns
in the polyprotein cleavage sites.