Decomposing the energetic impact of drug resistant mutations in HIV-1 protease on binding DRV
Abstract
Darunavir (DRV) is a high affinity (4.5x10(-12) M, DeltaG = -15.2 kcal/mol) HIV-1 protease inhibitor. Two drug-resistant protease variants FLAP+ (L10I, G48V, I54V, V82A) and ACT (V82T, I84V) decrease the binding affinity with DRV by 1.0 kcal/mol and 1.6 kcal/mol respectively. In this study the absolute and relative binding free energies of DRV with wild-type protease, FLAP+ and ACT were calculated with MM-PB/GBSA and thermodynamic integration methods, respectively. Free energy decomposition elucidated that the mutations conferred resistance by distorting the active site of HIV-1 protease so that the residues that lost binding free energy were not limited to the sites of mutation. Specifically the bis-tetrahydrofuranylurethane moiety of DRV maintained interactions with the FLAP+ and ACT variants, whereas the 4 - amino phenyl group lost more binding free energy with the protease in the FLAP+ and ACT complexes than in the wild-type protease which could account for the majority of the loss in binding free energy. This suggested that replacement of the 4 - amino phenyl group might generate new inhibitors less susceptible to the drug resistant mutations.
Suggested Citation
Yufeng Cai and Celia A. Schiffer. "Decomposing the energetic impact of drug resistant mutations in HIV-1 protease on binding DRV" Journal of chemical theory and computation 6.4 (2010).
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/celia_schiffer/30