Tyrosine-sulfated V2 peptides inhibit HIV-1 infection via coreceptor mimicry

July 28, 2017

Title

Tyrosine-sulfated V2 peptides inhibit HIV-1 infection via coreceptor mimicry

Author

Raffaello Cimbro, Francis C. Peterson, Qingbo Liu, Christina Guzzo, Peng Zhang, Huiyi Miao, Donald Van Ryk, Xavier Ambroggio, Darrell E. Hurt, Luca De Gioia, Brian F. Volkman, Michael A. Dolan, Paolo Lusso

Year

2016

Journal

EBioMedicine

Abstract

Tyrosine sulfation is a post-translational modification that facilitates protein-protein interaction. Two sulfated tyrosines (Tys173 and Tys177) were recently identified within the second variable (V2) loop of the major HIV-1 envelope glycoprotein, gp120, and shown to contribute to stabilizing the intramolecular interaction between V2 and the third variable (V3) loop. Here, we report that tyrosine-sulfated peptides derived from V2 act as structural and functional mimics of the CCR5 N-terminus and potently block HIV-1 infection. Nuclear magnetic and surface plasmon resonance analyses indicate that a tyrosine-sulfated V2 peptide (pV2α-Tys) adopts a CCR5-like helical conformation and directly interacts with gp120 in a CD4-dependent fashion, competing with a CCR5 N-terminal peptide. Sulfated V2 mimics, but not their non-sulfated counterparts, inhibit HIV-1 entry and fusion by preventing coreceptor utilization, with the highly conserved C-terminal sulfotyrosine, Tys177, playing a dominant role. Unlike CCR5 N-terminal peptides, V2 mimics inhibit a broad range of HIV-1 strains irrespective of their coreceptor tropism, highlighting the overall structural conservation of the coreceptor-binding site in gp120. These results document the use of receptor mimicry by a retrovirus to occlude a key neutralization target site and provide leads for the design of therapeutic strategies against HIV-1.

Instrument

J-810

Keywords

Circular dichroism, Secondary structure, Biochemistry, Medicinal