Molecular mechanism of a specific capsid binder resistance caused by mutations outside the binding pocket

  • Heike Braun
  • , Johannes Kirchmair
  • , Mark J. Williamson
  • , Vadim A. Makarov
  • , Olga B. Riabova
  • , Robert C. Glen
  • , Andreas Sauerbrei
  • , Michaela Schmidtke (Corresponding author)

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

Enteroviruses cause various acute and chronic diseases. The most promising therapeutics for these infections are capsid-binding molecules. These can act against a broad spectrum of enteroviruses, but emerging resistant virus variants threaten their efficacy. All known enterovirus variants with high-level resistance toward capsid-binding molecules have mutations of residues directly involved in the formation of the hydrophobic binding site. This is a first report of substitutions outside the binding pocket causing this type of drug resistance: I1207K and I1207R of the viral capsid protein 1 of coxsackievirus B3. Both substitutions completely abolish the antiviral activity of pleconaril (a capsid-binding molecule) but do not affect viral replication rates in vitro. Molecular dynamics simulations indicate that the resistance mechanism is mediated by a conformational rearrangement of R1095, which is a neighboring residue of 1207 located at the heel of the binding pocket. These insights provide a basis for the design of resistance-breaking inhibitors.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)138-145
Number of pages8
JournalAntiviral Research
Volume123
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2015
Externally publishedYes

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 106005 Bioinformatics
  • 301207 Pharmaceutical chemistry

Keywords

  • Antiviral
  • Computational studies
  • Drug susceptibility testing
  • Enterovirus
  • Pleconaril
  • Rhinovirus

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