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New compound targets drug-resistant HIV mutants

July 25, 2018

Antiretroviral therapies have worked wonders suppressing HIV replication and its progression to AIDS, but their effectiveness is deteriorating due to the constant development of drug resistance in the virus. Now Yale researchers have shown their newly developed compounds maintain anti-HIV activity against drug-resistant mutants better than FDA-approved medications.

The new compounds work by inhibiting the function of a viral enzyme, called reverse transcriptase, which is essential for HIV replication. The researchers report in the online journal eLifethat high resolution images of viral crystal structures reveal the new inhibitors bind to both the “wild-type” and the mutant forms of the reverse transcriptase.

Examinations of the structures and results from biochemical assays show that the new reverse transcriptase inhibitors, “were better able to adopt their shapes’’ to bind to mutant HIV reverse transcriptase than existing agents, said Yang Yang, a postdoctoral researcher in the laboratory of Yale professor and Nobel laureate Thomas A. Steitzand first author of the study.

The work was done in collaboration with Professor Xinyong Liu’s group at Shandong University in China. The study was supported by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and the National Institutes of Health.

Submitted by Lisa Brophy on August 03, 2018