Abstract
The M2 protein from influenza A virus is a pH-activated proton channel that mediates acidification of the interior of viral particles entrapped in endosomes. M2 is the target of the anti-influenza drugs amantadine and rimantadine; recently, resistance to these drugs in humans, birds and pigs has reached more than 90% (ref. 1). Here we describe the crystal structure of the transmembrane-spanning region of the homotetrameric protein in the presence and absence of the channel-blocking drug amantadine. pH-dependent structural changes occur near a set of conserved His and Trp residues that are involved in proton gating. The drug-binding site is lined by residues that are mutated in amantadine-resistant viruses. Binding of amantadine physically occludes the pore, and might also perturb the pK a of the critical His residue. The structure provides a starting point for solving the problem of resistance to M2-channel blockers. ©2008 Nature Publishing Group.
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CITATION STYLE
Stouffer, A. L., Acharya, R., Salom, D., Levine, A. S., Di Costanzo, L., Soto, C. S., … DeGrado, W. F. (2008). Structural basis for the function and inhibition of an influenza virus proton channel. Nature, 451(7178), 596–599. https://doi.org/10.1038/nature06528
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