Dengue fever is a severe, widespread, and neglected disease with more than 2 million diagnosed infections per year. The dengue virus NS2B/NS3 protease (PR) represents a prime target for rational drug design. At the moment, there are no clinical PR inhibitors (PIs) available. We have identified diaryl (thio)ethers as candidates for a novel class of PIs. Here, we report the selective and noncompetitive inhibition of the serotype 2 and 3 dengue virus PR in vitro and in cells by benzothiazole derivatives exhibiting 50% inhibitory concentrations (IC 50 s) in the low-micromolar range. Inhibition of replication of DENV serotypes 1 to 3 was specific, since all substances influenced neither hepatitis C virus (HCV) nor HIV-1 replication. Molecular docking suggests binding at a specific allosteric binding site. In addition to the in vitro assays, a cell-based PR assay was developed to test these substances in a replication-independent way. The new compounds inhibited the DENV PR with IC 50 s in the low-micromolar or submicromolar range in cells. Furthermore, these novel PIs inhibit viral replication at submicromolar concentrations. Dengue viruses (DENVs) are enveloped positive-strand RNA viruses and belong to the family Flaviviridae. DENV is the most important arthropod-borne viral infection. Over one-third of the world population lives in areas of DENV endemicity, and an estimated 390 million infections occur every year. In addition, the number of countries having experienced DENV epidemics has risen from 9 in 1970 to more than 100 today (1, 2). Furthermore, the number of diagnosed infections across America, Southeast Asia, and the Western Pacific nearly doubled from 1.2 million in 2008 to over 2.3 million in 2010 (2). Four different DENV serotypes have been identified so far. Recently, evidence for an additional subtype has been presented (3). Serotypes 1 to 4 are now prevalent in Asia, Africa, and America, and the regions where dengue is endemic are still increasing (4-6), with dengue endangering even Europe and the United States due to vector spread. DENV infections can be associated with dengue fever, but up to 88% of the infections remain inapparent (7). These nonpersistent infected patients serve besides persistently infected mosquitoes as a virus reservoir. Severe DENV infections and especially reinfections may lead to dengue hemorrhagic fever and dengue shock syndrome, with lethality up to 5% (2,8,9). There is neither a vaccination nor a specific treatment for DENV infections.The DENV genome contains a single open reading frame, which encodes the structural proteins capsid, membrane precursor (prM), and envelope and the nonstructural proteins NS1, NS2, NS3, NS4, and NS5 (10). Cellular proteases and the viral serine protease (PR) are responsible for cleaving the viral precursor polyprotein into functional proteins. The DENV PR consists of the amino-terminal domain of the NS3 protein and requires NS2B, a 14-kDa protein, as a cofactor to form a stable complex. This heterodimeric PR cleaves at the capsid-prM, NS2A/NS2...
BackgroundRecently, contradictory results on foamy virus protease activity were published. While our own results indicated that protease activity is regulated by the viral RNA, others suggested that the integrase is involved in the regulation of the protease.ResultsTo solve this discrepancy we performed additional experiments showing that the protease-reverse transcriptase (PR-RT) exhibits protease activity in vitro and in vivo, which is independent of the integrase domain. In contrast, Pol incorporation, and therefore PR activity in the viral context, is dependent on the integrase domain. To further analyse the regulation of the protease, we incorporated Pol in viruses by expressing a GagPol fusion protein, which supported near wild-type like infectivity. A GagPR-RT fusion, lacking the integrase domain, also resulted in wild-type like Gag processing, indicating that the integrase is dispensable for viral Gag maturation. Furthermore, we demonstrate with a trans-complementation assays that the PR in the context of the PR-RT protein supports in trans both, viral maturation and infectivity.ConclusionWe provide evidence that the FV integrase is required for Pol encapsidation and that the FV PR activity is integrase independent. We show that an active PR can be encapsidated in trans as a GagPR-RT fusion protein.
bIn contrast to orthoretroviruses, processing of foamy viral p71 Gag is limited to a single cleavage site. Nevertheless, Gag maturation is essential for infectivity, but deletion of p3 results in a modest drop in infectivity. Here, we show that Gag processing of p71 to p68 and p3 is essential for full-length cDNA synthesis, while inactivation of Gag cleavage results in cDNAs containing only the RU5 region; cDNAs encompassing the U3 region were almost undetectable.
Foamy viruses are non-pathogenic retroviruses and represent a tool for vector development. For gene therapy applications and for analyses of viral protein composition infectious particles need to be purified, which has been difficult for foamy viruses in the past. Here, we describe a novel, simple, and fast purification method for prototype foamy viruses with high purity using size exclusion and affinity chromatography. More than 99,9% of the contaminating proteins were removed. The purified viruses were used to determine the amount of the incorporated Pol protein relative to Gag. The determined Gag to Pol PR-RT ratio of 30:1 confirmed previous studies suggesting FV virions encapsidate fewer number of Pol molecules than orthoretroviruses.
In contrast to orthoretroviruses, the foamy virus protease is only active as a protease-reverse transcriptase fusion protein and requires viral RNA for activation. Maturation of foamy viral proteins seems to be restricted to a single cleavage site in Gag and Pol. We provide evidence that unprocessed Gag is required for optimal infectivity, which is unique among retroviruses. Analyses of the cleavage site sequences of the Gag and Pol cleavage sites revealed a high similarity compared to those of Lentiviruses. We show that positions P2׳ and P2 are invariant and that Gag and Pol cleavage sites are processed with similar efficiencies. The RNase H domain is essential for protease activity, but can functionally be substituted by RNase H domains of other retroviruses. Thus, the RNase H domain might be involved in the stabilization of the protease dimer, while the RT domain is essential for RNA dependent protease activation.
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