Crossref journal-article
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (341)
Abstract

The observed in vitro and in vivo benefit of combination treatment with anti-human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) agents prompted us to examine the potential of resistance development when two protease inhibitors are used concurrently. Recombinant HIV-1 (NL4-3) proteases containing combined resistance mutations associated with BMS-186318 and A-77003 (or saquinavir) were either inactive or had impaired enzyme activity. Subsequent construction of HIV-1 (NL4-3) proviral clones containing the same mutations yielded viruses that were severely impaired in growth or nonviable, confirming that combination therapy may be advantageous. However, passage of BMS-186318-resistant HIV-1 (RF) in the presence of either saquinavir or SC52151, which represented sequential drug treatment, produced viable viruses resistant to both BMS-186318 and the second compound. The predominant breakthrough virus contained the G48V/A71T/V82A protease mutations. The clone-purified RF (G48V/A71T/V82A) virus, unlike the corresponding defective NL4-3 triple mutant, grew well and displayed cross-resistance to four distinct protease inhibitors. Chimeric virus and in vitro mutagenesis studies indicated that the RF-specific protease sequence, specifically the Ile at residue 10, enabled the NL4-3 strain with the triple mutant to grow. Our results clearly indicate that viral genetic background will play a key role in determining whether cross-resistance variants will arise.

Bibliography

Rose, R. E., Gong, Y. F., Greytok, J. A., Bechtold, C. M., Terry, B. J., Robinson, B. S., Alam, M., Colonno, R. J., & Lin, P. F. (1996). Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 viral background plays a major role in development of resistance to protease inhibitors. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 93(4), 1648–1653.

Authors 9
  1. R E Rose (first)
  2. Y F Gong (additional)
  3. J A Greytok (additional)
  4. C M Bechtold (additional)
  5. B J Terry (additional)
  6. B S Robinson (additional)
  7. M Alam (additional)
  8. R J Colonno (additional)
  9. P F Lin (additional)
References 0 Referenced 93

None

Dates
Type When
Created 23 years ago (July 26, 2002, 10:43 a.m.)
Deposited 3 years, 4 months ago (April 13, 2022, 2:14 p.m.)
Indexed 2 months, 1 week ago (June 15, 2025, 12:22 p.m.)
Issued 29 years, 6 months ago (Feb. 20, 1996)
Published 29 years, 6 months ago (Feb. 20, 1996)
Published Online 29 years, 6 months ago (Feb. 20, 1996)
Published Print 29 years, 6 months ago (Feb. 20, 1996)
Funders 0

None

@article{Rose_1996, title={Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 viral background plays a major role in development of resistance to protease inhibitors.}, volume={93}, ISSN={1091-6490}, url={http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.93.4.1648}, DOI={10.1073/pnas.93.4.1648}, number={4}, journal={Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences}, publisher={Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences}, author={Rose, R E and Gong, Y F and Greytok, J A and Bechtold, C M and Terry, B J and Robinson, B S and Alam, M and Colonno, R J and Lin, P F}, year={1996}, month=feb, pages={1648–1653} }