Ordered accumulation of mutations in HIV protease confers resistance to ritonavir

Author:  ["Akhteruzzaman Molla","Marina Korneyeva","Qing Gao","Sudthida Vasavanonda","Paaline J. Schipper","Hong-Mei Mo","Martin Markowitz","Tatyana Chernyavskiy","Ping Niu","Nicholas Lyons","Ann Hsu","G. Richard Granneman","David D. Ho","Charles A.B. Boucher","John M. Leonard","Daniel W. Norbeck","Dale J. Kempf"]

Publication:  Nature Medicine

CITE.CC academic search helps you expand the influence of your papers.

Tags:     Medicine

Abstract

Analysis of the HIV protease gene from the plasma of HIV–infected patients revealed substitutions at nine different codons selected in response to monotherapy with the protease inhibitor ritonavir. Mutants at valine–82, although insufficient to confer resistance, appeared first in most patients. Significant phenotypic resistance required multiple mutations in HIV protease, which emerged subsequently in an ordered, stepwise fashion. The appearance of resistance mutations was delayed in patients with higher plasma levels of ritonavir. Early mutants retained susceptibility to structurally diverse protease inhibitors, suggesting that dual protease inhibitor therapy might increase the duration of viral suppression.

Cite this article

Molla, A., Korneyeva, M., Gao, Q. et al. Ordered accumulation of mutations in HIV protease confers resistance to ritonavir. Nat Med 2, 760–766 (1996). https://doi.org/10.1038/nm0796-760

View full text

>> Full Text:   Ordered accumulation of mutations in HIV protease confers resistance to ritonavir

Protective mucosal immunity elicited by targeted iliac lymph node immunization with a subunit SIV en

A functionally inactive p53 protein interatocarcinoma cells is activated by either DNA damage or cel