Drug Susceptibility and Viral Fitness of HIV-1 with Integrase Strand Transfer Inhibitor Resistance Substitution Q148R or N155H in Combination with Nucleoside/Nucleotide Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitor Resistance Substitutions

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Drug Susceptibility and Viral Fitness of HIV-1 with Integrase Strand Transfer Inhibitor Resistance Substitution Q148R or N155H in Combination with Nucleoside/Nucleotide Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitor Resistance Substitutions
المؤلفون: Kirsten L. White, Michael D. Miller, Kristen Andreatta
المصدر: Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy. 60(2)
سنة النشر: 2015
مصطلحات موضوعية: 0301 basic medicine, Anti-HIV Agents, viruses, 030106 microbiology, Drug resistance, HIV Integrase, Quinolones, Virus Replication, Antiviral Agents, 03 medical and health sciences, Drug Resistance, Multiple, Viral, immune system diseases, medicine, Emtricitabine, Humans, Pharmacology (medical), HIV Integrase Inhibitors, Tenofovir, Pharmacology, Reverse-transcriptase inhibitor, biology, Elvitegravir, Cobicistat, virus diseases, RNA-Directed DNA Polymerase, biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition, Resistance mutation, Virology, Molecular biology, Reverse transcriptase, Integrase, Infectious Diseases, Viral replication, biology.protein, HIV-1, Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors, medicine.drug
الوصف: In clinical trials of coformulated elvitegravir (EVG), cobicistat (COBI), emtricitabine (FTC), and tenofovir disoproxil fumarate (TDF), emergent drug resistance predominantly involved the FTC resistance substitution M184V/I in reverse transcriptase (RT), with or without the tenofovir (TFV) resistance substitution K65R, accompanied by a primary EVG resistance substitution (E92Q, N155H, or Q148R) in integrase (IN). We previously reported that the RT-K65R, RT-M184V, and IN-E92Q substitutions lacked cross-class phenotypic resistance and replicative fitness compensation. As a follow-up, the in vitro characteristics of mutant HIV-1 containing RT-K65R and/or RT-M184V with IN-Q148R or IN-N155H were also evaluated, alone and in combination, for potential interactions. Single mutants displayed reduced susceptibility to their corresponding inhibitor classes, with no cross-class resistance. Viruses with IN-Q148R or IN-N155H exhibited reduced susceptibility to EVG (137- and 40-fold, respectively) that was not affected by the addition of RT-M184V or RT-K65R/M184V. All viruses containing RT-M184V were resistant to FTC (>1,000-fold). Mutants with RT-K65R had reduced susceptibility to TFV (3.3- to 3.6-fold). Without drugs present, the viral fitness of RT and/or IN mutants was diminished relative to that of the wild type in the following genotypic order: wild type > RT-M184V ≥ IN-N155H ≈ IN-Q148R ≥ RT-M184V + IN-N155H ≥ RT-M184V + IN-Q148R ≥ RT-K65R/M184V + IN-Q148R ≈ RT-K65R/M184V + IN-N155H. In the presence of drug concentrations approaching physiologic levels, drug resistance counteracted replication defects, allowing single mutants to outcompete the wild type with one drug present and double mutants to outcompete single mutants with two drugs present. These results suggest that during antiretroviral treatment with multiple drugs, the development of viruses with combinations of resistance substitutions may be favored despite diminished viral fitness.
تدمد: 1098-6596
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::1614515e518168fa93dc8f65d98b7154
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26574015
Rights: OPEN
رقم الانضمام: edsair.doi.dedup.....1614515e518168fa93dc8f65d98b7154
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE