Molecular engineering of RANTES peptide mimetics with potent anti-HIV-1 activity

2011 
The chemokine receptor CCR5 is utilized as a critical coreceptor by most primary HIV-1 strains. While the lack of structural information on CCR5 has hampered the rational design of specific inhibitors, mimetics of the chemokines that naturally bind CCR5 can be molecularly engineered. We used a structure-guided approach to design peptide mimetics of the N-loop and β1-strand regions of regulated on activation normal T-cell-expressed and secreted (RANTES)/CCL5, which contain the primary molecular determinants of HIV-1 blockade. Rational modifications were sequentially introduced into the N-loop/β1-strand sequence, leading to the generation of mimetics with potent activity against a broad spectrum of CCR5-specific HIV-1 isolates (IC50 range: 104–640 nM) but lacking activity against CXCR4-specific HIV-1 isolates. Functional enhancement was initially achieved with the stabilization of the N loop in the β-extended conformation adopted in full-length RANTES, as confirmed by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) analysis. However, the most dramatic increase in antiviral potency resulted from the engraftment of an in silico-optimized linker segment designed using de novo structure-prediction algorithms to stabilize the C-terminal α-helix and experimentally validated by NMR. Our mimetics exerted CCR5-antagonistic effects, demonstrating that the antiviral and proinflammatory functions of RANTES can be uncoupled. RANTES peptide mimetics provide new leads for the development of safe and effective HIV-1 entry inhibitors.—Lusso, P., Vangelista, L., Cimbro, R., Secchi, M., Sironi, F., Longhi, R., Faiella, M., Maglio, O., Pavone, V. Molecular engineering of RANTES peptide mimetics with potent anti-HIV-1 activity.
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