Restoration of the antiviral activity of 3′-azido-3′-deoxythymidine (AZT) against AZT-resistant human immunodeficiency virus by delivery of engineered thymidylate kinase to T cells

Author:

Lavie Arnon1,Su Ying2,Ghassemi Mahmood2,Novak Richard M.2,Caffrey Michael1,Sekulic Nikolina1,Monnerjahn Christian3,Konrad Manfred3,Cook James L.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL 60612, USA

2. Section of Infectious Diseases, Immunology and International Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL 60612, USA

3. Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry, Am Fassberg 11, 37077 Göttingen, Germany

Abstract

Emergence of antiviral drug resistance is a major challenge to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) therapy. The archetypal example of this problem is loss of antiviral activity of the nucleoside analogue 3′-azido-3′-deoxythymidine (AZT), caused by mutations in reverse transcriptase (RT), the viral polymerase. AZT resistance results from an imbalance between rates of AZT-induced proviral DNA chain termination and RT-induced excision of the chain-terminating nucleotide. Conversion of the AZT prodrug from its monophosphorylated to diphosphorylated form by human thymidylate kinase (TMPK) is inefficient, resulting in accumulation of the monophosphorylated AZT metabolite (AZT-MP) and a low concentration of the active triphosphorylated metabolite (AZT-TP). We reasoned that introduction of an engineered, highly active TMPK into T cells would overcome this functional bottleneck in AZT activation and thereby shift the balance of AZT activity sufficiently to block replication of formerly AZT-resistant HIV. Molecular engineering was used to link highly active, engineered TMPKs to the protein transduction domain of Tat for direct cell delivery. Combined treatment of HIV-infected T cells with AZT and these cell-permeable, engineered TMPKs restored AZT-induced repression of viral production. These results provide an experimental basis for the development of new strategies to therapeutically increase the intracellular concentrations of active nucleoside analogue metabolites as a means to overcome emerging drug resistance.

Publisher

Microbiology Society

Subject

Virology

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