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Structure of
Integrase Enzyme May Help Improve HIV Drugs Isentress & Elvitegravir
February 1, 2010
Researchers have made a breakthrough
in HIV research that had eluded scientists for over 20 years,
potentially leading to better treatments for HIV, in a study published
January 30 in the journal Nature.
The
structure of integrase bound to viral DNA. Credit: Imperial College
London
The researchers, from Imperial College London and Harvard University,
have grown a crystal that reveals the structure of an enzyme called
integrase, which is found in retroviruses like HIV. When HIV infects
someone, it uses integrase to paste a copy of its genetic information
into their DNA.
Prior to the new study, which was funded by the Medical Research Council
and the US National Institutes of Health, many researchers had tried and
failed to work out the three-dimensional structure of integrase bound to
viral DNA. New antiretroviral drugs for HIV like Isentress from Merck
and elvitegravir, an experimental drug from Gilead Sciences work by
blocking integrase, but scientists did not understand exactly how these
drugs were working or how to improve them.
Researchers can only determine the structure of this kind of molecular
machinery by obtaining high quality crystals. For the new study,
researchers grew a crystal using a version of integrase borrowed from a
little-known retrovirus called Prototype Foamy Virus (PFV). Based on
their knowledge of PFV integrase and its function, they were confident
that it was very similar to its HIV counterpart.
Over the course of four years, the researchers carried out over 40,000
trials, out of which they were able to grow just seven kinds of
crystals. Only one of these was of sufficient quality to allow
determination of the three-dimensional structure.
Dr
Peter Cherepanov, the lead author of the study from the Department of
Medicine at Imperial College London, said: "It is a truly amazing story.
When we started out, we knew that the project was very difficult, and
that many tricks had already been tried and given up by others long ago.
Therefore, we went back to square one and started by looking for a
better model of HIV integrase, which could be more amenable for
crystallization. Despite initially painstakingly slow progress and very
many failed attempts, we did not give up and our effort was finally
rewarded."
After growing the crystals in the lab, the researchers used the giant
synchrotron machine at the Diamond Light Source in South Oxfordshire to
collect X-ray diffraction data from these crystals, which enabled them
to determine the long-sought structure. The researchers then soaked the
crystals in solutions of the integrase inhibiting drugs Raltegravir
(also known as Isentress) and Elvitegravir and observed for the first
time how these antiretroviral drugs bind to and inactivate integrase.
The new study shows that retroviral integrase has quite a different
structure to that which had been predicted based on earlier research.
Availability of the integrase structure means that researchers can begin
to fully understand how existing drugs that inhibit integrase are
working, how they might be improved, and how to stop HIV developing
resistance to them. |