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Query: UMLS:C0019693 (
HIV
)
170,526
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Retroviral proteases are obligate homodimers and play an essential role in the viral life cycle. Dissociation of dimers or prevention of their assembly may inactivate these enzymes and prevent viral maturation. A salient structural feature of these enzymes is an extended interface composed of interdigitating N- and C-terminal residues of both monomers, which form a four-stranded beta-sheet. Peptides mimicking one beta-strand (residues 95-99), or two beta-strands (residues 1-5 plus 95-99 or 95-99 plus 95-99) from the human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV1) interface were shown to inhibit the HIV1 and 2 proteases (PRs) with IC50's in the low micromolar range. These interface peptides show cognate enzyme preference and do not inhibit pepsin,
renin
, or the Rous sarcoma virus PR, indicating a degree of specificity for the
HIV
PRs. A tethered HIV1 PR dimer was not inhibited to the same extent as the wild-type enzymes by any of the interface peptides, suggesting that these peptides can only interact effectively with the interface of the two-subunit
HIV
PR. Measurements of relative dissociation constants by limit dilution of the enzyme show that the one-strand peptide causes a shift in the observed Kd for the HIV1 PR. Both one- and two-strand peptides alter the monomer/dimer equilibrium of both HIV1 and HIV2 PRs. This was shown by the reduced cross-linking of the HIV2 PR by disuccinimidyl suberate in the presence of the interface peptides. Refolding of the HIV1 and HIV2 PRs with the interface peptides shows that only the two-strand peptides prevent the assembly of active PR dimers. Although both one- and two-strand peptides seem to affect dimer dissociation, only the two-strand peptides appear to block assembly. The latter may prove to be more effective backbones for the design of inhibitors directed toward retroviral PR dimerization in vivo.
...
PMID:Synthetic "interface" peptides alter dimeric assembly of the HIV 1 and 2 proteases. 133 45
Recently we reported (D. B. Evans, W. G. Tarpley, and S. K. Sharma, 1991, Protein Expression Purif. 2, 205-213) the cloning, expression, and characterization of recombinant chimeric proteins with an N-terminal metal-binding peptide (mbp), His-Asp-His-Asp-His, and a
renin
cleavage site. Using these chimerics as examples, we describe here the use of genetically engineered alternating histidines in the purification of these chimerics by immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC). In these chimerics, an alternate histidine-containing peptide was fused to the N-termini of
HIV
reverse transcriptase (
HIV
RT) and beta-galactosidase. These chimerics were retarded on immobilized nickel very strongly and could be completely eluted only by the use of 100 mM imidazole, whereas the wildtype
HIV
RT and Escherichia coli contaminating proteins were eluted between 10 and 35 mM imidazole. When the DNA coding for the mbp was removed, the resulting chimerics were recovered from the IMAC column at 35 mM imidazole. The strong and specific interaction between the chimeric protein and the immobilized metal ion was also abolished when the mbp was specifically cleaved by human
renin
. It is concluded from these studies that tailoring recombinant proteins with three or more alternate histidines should result in the isolation of such chimeric proteins from crude mixtures in a single step. Since IMAC is amendable to scale up, the tailored specificity engineered into the protein of interest via an mbp should allow one to achieve large-scale isolation of recombinant proteins from bacterial and nonbacterial hosts in a highly predictable manner.
...
PMID:On the engineering of rDNA proteins for purification by immobilized metal affinity chromatography: applications to alternating histidine-containing chimeric proteins from recombinant Escherichia coli. 138 56
This report details the structure-activity relationships of the
HIV
gag substrate analog Val-Ser-Gln-Asn-Leu psi[CH(OH)CH2]Val-Ile-Val (U-85548E), an inhibitor exhibiting subnanomolar affinity towards
HIV
type-1 aspartic proteinase (
HIV
-1 PR). Our data show that the P1-P2' tripeptidyl sequence provides the minimal chemical determinant for
HIV
-1 PR binding. We describe the structure-activity properties of Leu psi[CH(OH)CH2]Val substitution in other peptidyl ligands of nonviral substrate origin (e.g., angiotensinogen, insulin and pepstatin). Furthermore, the aspartic proteinase selectivities of a few key compounds are summarized relative to evaluation against human
renin
, human pepsin, and the fungal enzyme, rhizopuspepsin. These studies have led to the rational design of nanomolar potent inhibitors of both
HIV
-1 and
HIV
-2 PR. Finally, a 2.5 A resolution X-ray crystallographic structure of U-85548E complexed to synthetic
HIV
-1 PR dimer (Jaskolski et al., Biochemistry 30, 1600 [1991]) provided a 3-D picture of the inhibitor bound to the enzyme active site, and we performed computer-assisted molecular modeling studies to explore the possible binding modes of the above series of Leu psi[CH(OH)CH2]Val substituted
HIV
-1 PR inhibitors.
...
PMID:HIV protease (HIV PR) inhibitor structure-activity-selectivity, and active site molecular modeling of high affinity Leu [CH(OH)CH2]Val modified viral and nonviral substrate analogs. 147 85
Retroviruses encode proteinases necessary for the proteolytic processing of the viral gag and gag-pol precursor proteins. These enzymes have been shown to be structurally and functionally related to aspartyl proteinases such as pepsin and
renin
. Cerulenin is a naturally occurring antibiotic, commonly used as an inhibitor of fatty acid synthesis. Cerulenin has been observed to inhibit production of Rous sarcoma virus and murine leukaemia virus by infected cells, possibly by interfering with proteolytic processing of viral precursor proteins. We show here that cerulenin inhibits the action of the
HIV
-1 proteinase in vitro, using 3 substrates: a synthetic heptapeptide (SQNYPIV) which corresponds to the sequence at the
HIV
-1 gag p17/p24 junction, a bacterially expressed gag precursor, and purified 66 kDa reverse transcriptase. Inhibition of cleavage by
HIV
-1 proteinase required preincubation with cerulenin. Cerulenin also inactivates endothiapepsin, a well-characterised fungal aspartyl proteinase, suggesting that the action of cerulenin is a function of the common active site structure of the retroviral and aspartic proteinases. Molecular modelling suggests that cerulenin possesses several of the necessary structural features of an inhibitor of aspartyl proteinases and retroviral proteinases. Although cerulenin itself is cytotoxic and inappropriate for clinical use, it may provide leads for the rational design of inhibitors of the HIV proteinase which could have application in the chemotherapy of AIDS.
...
PMID:In vitro inhibition of HIV-1 proteinase by cerulenin. 169 Jan 52
A metal binding peptide, hexahistidine, preceding a
renin
cleavage sequence (Pro-Phe-His-Leu-Val-Ile-His-) was engineered on to the N-terminus of
HIV
-1 reverse transcriptase (RT). The chimeric protein was expressed in Escherichia coli and characterized after purification by DEAE chromatography and HPLC. Amino-terminal sequencing confirmed the presence of the first 15 amino acids of the chimeric protein. The chimeric exhibited RT activity like that of
HIV
-1 RT and was cleaved by human
renin
at the expected site. The potential of a hexa-histidine fusion in the purification of recombinant
HIV
-1 RT by immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC) on the commonly used resin (IDA-Ni2+) was investigated. The chimeric gene product from a crude E. coli extract was strongly retarded on a immobilized nickel column, while most of the contaminating E. coli proteins were eliminated after elution with 20-35 mM imidazole. The bound chimeric protein was eluted with 300 mM imidazole and appeared predominantly as a single band on an SDS-polyacrylamide gel. The remarkable specificity of this affinity tail was further demonstrated by separating the chimeric protein from
HIV
-1 RT in a crude extract prepared by mixing extracts from cells expressing
HIV
-1 RT and the hexahistidine recombinant chimeric protein. The usefulness of a enzymatically cleavable metal binding peptide in the rapid purification and production of
HIV
-1 RT without proteolysis to a heterodimer is discussed.
...
PMID:Metal affinity chromatography of recombinant HIV-1 reverse transcriptase containing a human renin cleavable metal binding domain. 171 13
We report here for the first time that Zn2+ is an effective inhibitor of
renin
and the protease from
HIV
-1, two aspartyl proteinases of considerable physiological importance. Inhibition of
renin
is noncompetitive and is accompanied by binding of 1 mol of Zn2+/mol of enzyme. Depending on the substrate, inhibition of the
HIV
protease by Zn2+ can be either competitive or noncompetitive, but in neither case is loss of activity due to disruption of the protease dimer. Inhibition of both enzymes is first order with respect to Zn2+ and is rapidly reversed by addition of EDTA. Ki values are strongly pH dependent and optimal in the range of 20 microM at or above pH 7. All of the data in hand suggest that the inhibitory effect of Zn2+ is a consequence of its binding at, or near, the active-site carboxyl groups of these aspartyl proteinases. This inhibition of the viral enzyme may help to explain some of the beneficial effects seen in AIDS patients who have received Zn2+ therapy.
...
PMID:Zinc inhibition of renin and the protease from human immunodeficiency virus type 1. 188 32
The different isolates available for
HIV
-1 and
HIV
-2 were compared for the region of the protease (PR) sequence, and the variations in amino acids were analyzed with respect to the crystal structure of
HIV
-1 PR with inhibitor. Based on the extensive homology (39 identical out of 99 residues), models were built of the
HIV
-2 PR complexed with two different aspartic protease inhibitors, acetylpepstatin and a
renin
inhibitor, H-261. Comparison of the
HIV
-1 PR crystal structure and the
HIV
-2 PR model structure and the analysis of the changes found in different isolates showed that correlated substitutions occur in the hydrophobic interior of the molecule and at surface residues involved in ionic or hydrogen bond interactions. The substrate binding residues of
HIV
-1 and
HIV
-2 PRs show conservative substitutions of four residues. The difference in affinity of
HIV
-1 and
HIV
-2 PRs for the two inhibitors appears to be due in part to the change of Val 32 in
HIV
-1 PR to Ile in
HIV
-2 PR.
...
PMID:Comparative analysis of the sequences and structures of HIV-1 and HIV-2 proteases. 194 42
The relatively fast artificial substrate Leu-Ser-rho-nitro-Phe-Nle-Ala-Leu-OMe generates a solvent isotope effect of 1.51 +/- 0.02 only on the maximal velocity of peptide hydrolysis catalyzed by porcine pepsin (EC 3.4.23.1). The absence of an isotope effect on V/K places the isotopically-sensitive step after peptide bond cleavage and the release of the first product. Reprotonation of the active site aspartic carboxyls is proposed as the most likely interpretation of this observation. Structural and kinetic similarities between pepsin and other aspartic proteinases, including the therapeutically important targets
HIV
protease and
renin
, suggest a similar slow reprotonation step after catalysis. This mechanistic feature has important implications regarding inhibitor design; if most of the enzymes are present in a product-release form during steady-state turnover, then perhaps inhibitors should be designed as product analogs instead of substrate analogs.
...
PMID:Slow step after bond-breaking by porcine pepsin identified using solvent deuterium isotope effects. 201 46
The phosphinic acid isosteres of di-, tetra- and hexapeptides containing a hydrophobic amino acid side chains at the P1-P'1 positions are powerful inhibitors of
Human Immunodeficiency Virus
protease. Ki's ranged from 0.4 nM to 26 microM at pH 6.5 and were lower at pH 4.5. The compounds showed no activity against trypsin, weak activity against
renin
at pH 6.5, moderate activity against pepsin at pH 2.0 (Ki values in the microM range) and substantial activity against cathepsin D at pH 3.5 (Ki values from 9 to 300 nM).
...
PMID:Selective phosphinate transition-state analogue inhibitors of the protease of human immunodeficiency virus. 211 5
The nonapeptide H-Val-Ser-Gln-Asn-Tyr-Pro-Ile-Val-Gln-NH2 containing the retroviral Tyr-Pro cleavage site is a good substrate for the proteinase of human immunodeficiency viruses but it is not readily hydrolyzed by other nonviral proteinases including the structurally related pepsin-like aspartic proteinases. Replacing the Pro by L-pipecolic acid (2-piperidinecarboxylic acid) converted the substrate into an effective inhibitor of
HIV
-1 and
HIV
-2 proteinases with IC50 of approximately 1 microM. This compound showed a high degree of selectivity in that it did not inhibit cathepsin D and
renin
.
...
PMID:Substitution of proline with pipecolic acid at the scissile bond converts a peptide substrate of HIV proteinase into a selective inhibitor. 219 May 54
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