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Broad-spectrum antiviral activity of an ankyrin repeat protein on viral assembly against chimeric NL4-3 viruses carrying Gag/PR derived from circulating strains among northern thai patients
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Metadata
Document Title
Broad-spectrum antiviral activity of an ankyrin repeat protein on viral assembly against chimeric NL4-3 viruses carrying Gag/PR derived from circulating strains among northern thai patients
Author
Sakkhachornphop S., Hadpech S., Wisitponchai T., Panto C., Kantamala D., Utaipat U., Praparattanapan J., Kotarathitithum W., Taejaroenkul S., Yasamut U., Chupradit K., Moonmuang S., Lee V.S., Suparatpinyo K., Tayapiwatana C.
Name from Authors Collection
Affiliations
Research Institute for Health Sciences, Chiang Mai University, Chiang Mai, 50200, Thailand; Center of Biomolecular Therapy and Diagnostic, Faculty of Associated Medical Sciences, Chiang Mai University, Chiang Mai, 50200, Thailand; Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Burapha University, Chonburi, 20131, Thailand; Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Chiang Mai University, Chiang Mai, 50200, Thailand; Division of Clinical Immunology, Department of Medical Technology, Faculty of Associated Medical Sciences, Chiang Mai University, Chiang Mai, 50200, Thailand; Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, 50603, Malaysia; Biomedical Technology Research Center, National Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology, National Science and Technology Development Agency, Faculty of Associated Medical Sciences, Chiang Mai University, Chiang Mai, 50200, Thailand
Type
Article
Source Title
Viruses
ISSN
19994915
Year
2018
Volume
10
Issue
11
Open Access
Gold, Green
Publisher
MDPI AG
DOI
10.3390/v10110625
Abstract
Certain proteins have demonstrated proficient human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) life cycle disturbance. Recently, the ankyrin repeat protein targeting the HIV-1 capsid, AnkGAG 1D4, showed a negative effect on the viral assembly of the HIV-1NL4-3 laboratory strain. To extend its potential for future clinical application, the activity of AnkGAG 1D4 in the inhibition of other HIV-1 circulating strains was evaluated. Chimeric NL4-3 viruses carrying patient-derived Gag/PR-coding regions were generated from 131 antiretroviral drug-naïve HIV-1 infected individuals in northern Thailand during 2001–2012. SupT1, a stable T-cell line expressing AnkGAG 1D4 and ankyrin non-binding control (AnkA3 2D3), were challenged with these chimeric viruses. The p24CA sequences were analysed and classified using the K-means clustering method. Among all the classes of virus classified using the p24CA sequences, SupT1/AnkGAG 1D4 demonstrated significantly lower levels of p24CA than SupT1/AnkA3 2D3, which was found to correlate with the syncytia formation. This result suggests that AnkGAG 1D4 can significantly interfere with the chimeric viruses derived from patients with different sequences of the p24CA domain. It supports the possibility of ankyrin-based therapy as a broad alternative therapeutic molecule for HIV-1 gene therapy in the future. © 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
Keyword
Ankyrin | Gag polyprotein | HIV-1 | Protein therapy | Virus assembly inhibitor
License
CC BY
Rights
Author
Publication Source
Scopus