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The new and less toxic protease inhibitor saquinavir-NO maintains anti-HIV-1 properties in vitro indistinguishable from those of the parental compound saquinavir

Authors :
Yousef Al-Abed
Massimo Clementi
Diego Saita
Filippo Canducci
Ferdinando Nicoletti
Gianni Garotta
Elisa Rita Ceresola
Canducci, F
Ceresola, Er
Saita, D
Al Abed, Y
Garotta, G
Clementi, Massimo
Nicoletti, F.
Source :
Antiviral research. 91(3)
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Although, the antiviral activity, tolerability and convenience of protease inhibitors have improved significantly in recent years, toxicity-associated adverse events including diarrhea, lipid alterations, disturbance of glucose homeostasis and liver enzyme elevations still remain a major concern during treatment of HIV-1 patients. We have recently shown that the covalent attachment of the NO moiety to the HIV-1 protease inhibitor saquinavir (Saq–NO) reduces its toxicity. In this study, we evaluated in vitro the anti-HIV activity of Saq–NO vs. its parental compound Saq. Site directed mutants with the most frequently identified Saq associated resistance mutations and their combinations were generated on proviral AD8-based backbones. Phenotypic assays were conducted using wild type clinical isolates and fully replicating recombinant viruses with Saq and Saq–NO in parallel on purified CD4+ T cells. The following recombinant viruses were generated and tested: L33F, M46I, G48V, I54V, I84V + L90M, M46I + L90M, G48V + L90M, M46I + I54V + L90M, L33F + M46I + L90M. The fold change resistance compared to the wild type viruses was between 1.3 and 7 for all single mutants, between 3.4 and 20 for double mutants and between 16.7 and 28.5 for viruses carrying three mutations for both compounds. The results clearly demonstrate that Saq–NO maintains an anti-HIV-1 profile very similar to that of Saq. The possibility to reduce Saq associated side effects and to increase the concentration of the drug in vivo may allow a higher and possibly more effective dosage of Saq–NO in HIV-1-infected patients and to increase the genetic barrier of this PI thus impairing the selection of resistant clones.

Details

ISSN :
18729096
Volume :
91
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Antiviral research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2b865375461dd0f7d190726ef51cf4aa