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Novel Naturally Occurring Dipeptides and Single-Stranded Oligonucleotide Act as Entry Inhibitors and Exhibit a Strong Synergistic Anti-HIV-1 Profile
Stockholm University, Faculty of Science, Department of Molecular Biosciences, The Wenner-Gren Institute.ORCID iD: 0000-0003-3964-9512
Number of Authors: 42022 (English)In: Infectious Diseases and Therapy, ISSN 2193-8229, E-ISSN 2193-6382, Vol. 11, no 3, p. 1103-1116Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Introduction: The availability of new classes of antiretroviral drugs is critical for treatment-experienced patients due to drug resistance to and unwanted side effects from current drugs. Our aim was therefore to evaluate the anti-HIV-1 activity of a new set of antivirals, dipeptides (WG-am or VQ-am) combined with a single-stranded oligonucleotide (ssON). The dipeptides were identified as naturally occurring and enriched in feces and systemic circulation in HIV-1-infected elite controllers and were proposed to act as entry inhibitors by binding to HIV-1 gp120. The ssON is DNA 35-mer, stabilized by phosphorothioate modifications, which acts on the endocytic step by binding to cell host receptors and inhibiting viruses through interference with binding to nucleolin.

Methods: Chou–Talalay’s Combination Index method for quantifying synergism was used to evaluate the drug combinations. Patient-derived chimeric viruses encoding the gp120 (env region) were produced by transient transfection and used to evaluate the antiviral profile of the combinations by drug susceptibility assays.

Results: We found that the combination WG-am:ssON or VQ-am:ssON had low combination index values, suggesting strong antiviral synergism. Of the two combinations, WG-am:ssON (1 mM:1 μM) had high efficacy against all prototype or patient-derived HIV-1 isolates tested, independent of subtype including the HIV-1-A6 sub-subtype. In addition, the antiviral effect was independent of co-receptor usage in patient-derived strains.

Conclusion: WG-am and ssON alone significantly inhibited HIV-1 replication regardless of viral subtype and co-receptor usage, and the combination WG-am:ssON (1 mM:1 μM) was even more effective due to synergism.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
2022. Vol. 11, no 3, p. 1103-1116
Keywords [en]
Dipeptides, ssON, Antiviral, HIV-1, Entry, Elite controllers
National Category
Infectious Medicine
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:su:diva-204354DOI: 10.1007/s40121-022-00626-8ISI: 000779610400001PubMedID: 35391633Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85127593270OAI: oai:DiVA.org:su-204354DiVA, id: diva2:1656324
Available from: 2022-05-05 Created: 2022-05-05 Last updated: 2022-06-09Bibliographically approved

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Spetz, Anna-Lena

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