Antiviral Properties of HIV-1 Capsid Inhibitor GSK878.
Chunfu WangHaichang HuangKirsten MallonLourdes ValeraKyle ParcellaMark I CockettJohn F KadowEric P GillisMark KrystalRobert A FridellPublished in: Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy (2023)
GSK878 is a newly described HIV-1 inhibitor that binds to the mature capsid (CA) hexamer in a pocket originally identified as the binding site of the well-studied CA inhibitor PF-74. Here, we show that GSK878 is highly potent, inhibiting an HIV-1 reporter virus in MT-2 cells with a mean 50% effective concentration (EC 50 ) of 39 pM and inhibiting a panel of 48 chimeric viruses containing diverse CA sequences with a mean EC 50 of 94 pM. CA mutations associated with reduced susceptibility to other inhibitors that bind to PF-74 binding site (L56I, M66I, Q67H, N74D, T107N, and Q67H/N74D) also reduced susceptibility to GSK878, with M66I, Q67H/N74D, and L56I having the greatest impact on antiviral activity. Amino acid substitutions in the CA cyclophilin A (CypA) binding loop (H87P and P90A), distal from the inhibitor binding site and associated with reduced CA-CypA binding, subtly, but reproducibly, also decreased GSK878 potency. Mechanism-of-action studies showed that GSK878 blocked both early (preintegration) and late (postintegration) steps in HIV-1 replication, with the early inhibition primarily determining the compound's antiviral activity. The early inhibition results from blocks to HIV-1 nuclear import and proviral integration and is associated with altered stability of the HIV-1 CA core.
Keyphrases
- antiretroviral therapy
- hiv positive
- hiv testing
- hiv infected
- signaling pathway
- human immunodeficiency virus
- hepatitis c virus
- men who have sex with men
- hiv aids
- pi k akt
- south africa
- protein kinase
- air pollution
- risk assessment
- amino acid
- heavy metals
- oxidative stress
- binding protein
- cell death
- dna binding
- disease virus
- transcription factor