The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is a lentivirus that results in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). HIV treatment involving chemical therapeutic agents has improved the quality of life of HIV/AIDS patients. The present study demonstrates that a hydroxyproline-containing marine collagen peptide (APHCP) derived from Alaska pollack inhibits HIV-1 infection in the MT-4 human T cell-line. APHCP inhibited HIV-1IIIB-induced cell lysis, syncytia formation, reverse transcriptase activity and viral p24 production at non-cytotoxic concentrations; however, APHCP did not inhibit HIV-2ROD infection in MT-4 cells. This suggests that the anti-HIV activity of APHCP is specific to HIV-1. In addition, substitution of hydroxyproline residues in APHCP with prolines impaired its anti-HIV-1 activity, suggesting that the hydroxyl group of hydroxyprolines is required for the anti-HIV-1 activity of APHCP. These results suggested that the marine peptide APHCP may be a novel drug candidate in the development of next-generation therapeutic agents for the treatment of HIV/AIDS.
CITATION STYLE
Jang, I. S., & Park, S. J. (2016). Hydroxyproline-containing collagen peptide derived from the skin of the Alaska pollack inhibits HIV-1 infection. Molecular Medicine Reports, 14(6), 5489–5494. https://doi.org/10.3892/mmr.2016.5949
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