Retroviruses affect a large number of species, from fish and birds to mammals and humans, with global socioeconomic negative impacts. Here the authors report and experimentally validate a novel approach for the analysis of the molecular networks that are involved in the recognition of substrates by retroviral proteases. Using multivariate analysis of the sequence-based physiochemical descriptions of 61 retroviral proteases comprising wild-type proteases, natural mutants, and drug-resistant forms of proteases from nine different viral species in relation to their ability to cleave 299 substrates, the authors mapped the physicochemical properties and cross-dependencies of the amino acids of the proteases and their substrates, which revealed a complex molecular interaction network of substrate recognition and cleavage. The approach allowed a detailed analysis of the molecular-chemical mechanisms involved in substrate cleavage by retroviral proteases. © 2007 Kontijevskis et al.
CITATION STYLE
Kontijevskis, A., Prusis, P., Petrovska, R., Yahorava, S., Mutulis, F., Mutule, I., … Wikberg, J. E. S. (2007). A look inside HIV resistance through retroviral protease interaction maps. PLoS Computational Biology, 3(3), 0424–0435. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.0030048
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