Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Molecular Virology and Carcinogenesis, NCI-Frederick Cancer Research and Development Center, Maryland 21702-1201.
Abstract
The antiviral activities of two substrate-based inhibitors of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) protease, UK-88,947 and Ro 31-8959, were studied in acute infections. H9 and HeLaCD4-LTR/beta-gal cells were infected either with HIV-1IIIB or a replication-defective virus, HIV-gpt(HXB-2). Both inhibitors were capable of blocking early steps of HIV-1 replication if added to cells prior to infection. Partial inhibition was also obtained by addition of inhibitor at the time of or as late as 15 min after infection. The inhibitors were ineffective if added 30 min postinfection. The inhibitory effects were studied by cDNA analysis with PCR followed by Southern blot hybridization and by infectivity assays allowing quantitation of HIV-1 in a single cycle of replication. When UK-88,947-treated H9 cells were coinfected with HIV-1 and human T-cell leukemia virus type I only the replication of HIV-1 was inhibited, demonstrating viral specificity. Pretreating the infectious virus stocks with the inhibitors also prevented replication, indicating that the inhibitors block the action of the viral protease and not a cellular protease. A panel of primer sets was used to analyze cDNA from cell lysates by PCR amplification at 4 and 18 h postinfection. Four hours after infection, viral specific cDNA was detected with all of the four primer pairs used: R/U5, nef/U3, 5' gag, and long terminal repeat (LTR)/gag. However, after 18 h, only the R/U5 and nef/U3 primer pairs and not the 5' gag or LTR/gag primer pair were able to allow amplification of cDNA. The results suggest a crucial role of HIV-1 protease in the early phase of viral replication. Although it is not clear what early steps are affected by the protease, it is likely that the target is the NC protein, as referred from our previous reports of the in situ cleavage of the nucleocapsid (NC) protein by the viral protease inside lentiviral capsids. The results suggest that it is not the inhibition of initiation and progression of reverse transcription but the stability of full-size unintegrated cDNA which is affected in the presence of protease inhibitors. Alternatively, the cleavage of the NC protein may be required for the proper formation of preintegration complex and/or for its transport to the nucleus.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
63 articles.
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