Discovery of critical residues for viral entry and inhibition through structural insight of HIV-1 fusion inhibitor CP621-652

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Abstract

The core structure of HIV-1 gp41 is a stable six-helix bundle (6-HB) folded by its trimeric N- and C-terminal heptad repeats (NHR and CHR). We previously identified that the 621QIWN-NMT627motif located at the upstream region of gp41 CHR plays critical roles for the stabilization of the 6-HB core and peptide CP621-652 containing this motif is a potent HIV-1 fusion inhibitor, however, the molecular determinants underlying the stability and anti-HIV activity remained elusive. In this study, we determined the high-resolution crystal structure of CP621-652 complexed by T21. We find that the 621QIWNNMT627motif does not maintain the α-helical conformation. Instead, residues Met626 and Thr 627 form a unique hook-like structure (denoted as M-T hook), in which Thr627 redirects the peptide chain to position Met626 above the left side of the hydrophobic pocket on the NHR trimer. The side chain of Met626 caps the hydrophobic pocket, stabilizing the interaction between the pocket and the pocket-binding domain. Our mutagenesis studies demonstrate that mutations of the M-T hook residues could completely abolish HIV-1 Env-mediated cell fusion and virus entry, and significantly destabilize the interaction of NHR and CHR peptides and reduce the anti-HIV activity of CP621-652. Our results identify an unusual structural feature that stabilizes the six-helix bundle, providing novel insights into the mechanisms of HIV-1 fusion and inhibition. © 2012 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Inc.

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Chong, H., Yao, X., Qiu, Z., Qin, B., Han, R., Waltersperger, S., … He, Y. (2012). Discovery of critical residues for viral entry and inhibition through structural insight of HIV-1 fusion inhibitor CP621-652. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 287(24), 20281–20289. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M112.354126

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