Protease inhibitors

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Protease inhibitors

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Protease inhibitors

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A 25-year-old man presents to the emergency room after being in close contact with an individual diagnosed with meningococcal meningitis. The patient is a graduate student and lives in an apartment with several roommates. One of the roommates had recently fallen ill and was diagnosed with Neisseria meningitidis infection earlier today. The patient is currently asymptomatic but is worried he may have been exposed to the pathogen. His past medical history is notable for HIV infection, for which he currently takes lamivudine, lopinavir, and abacavir. Temperature is 37.5°C (99.5°F), blood pressure is 119/72 mmHg, and pulse is 65/min. Physical examination is unremarkable, and no nuchal rigidity is present. The patient’s most recent CD4 cell count is 700/mm3. Which of the following medications should be administered for post-exposure prophylaxis?  

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Protease inhibitors are an important part of HAART, or highly active antiretroviral therapy, which is the combination of medications used in the treatment of AIDS.

AIDS is caused by an RNA containing retrovirus called human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV.

Protease inhibitors, or PIs, work by inhibiting the enzyme HIV-1 protease, which prevents the formation of new viruses and further infection of the host’s cells.

HIV is a single-stranded, positive-sense, enveloped RNA retrovirus that targets cells in the immune system that have molecules called CD4 on their membranes.

These include macrophages, dendritic cells, and especially CD4+ T-helper cells.

HIV attaches to the CD4 molecule via a protein called gp120 found on its envelope.

Now, inside its envelope, HIV contains a nucleocapsid which is a capsule containing a single-stranded RNA and some viral enzymes, like reverse transcriptase, integrase, and aspartate protease, also known as a mature HIV-1 protease.

As HIV binds to the receptors, the viral envelope fuses with the cell membrane of the immune cell, releasing the contents of the nucleocapsid into the helpless host cell’s cytoplasm.

Once it’s inside the CD4+ cell, reverse transcriptase gets to work immediately.

It uses the single-stranded viral RNA as a template and uses the nucleotides present in the cytoplasm of the CD4+ cell to transcribe a complementary double-stranded “proviral” DNA.

This proviral DNA enters the T-helper cell’s nucleus and pops itself into the cell’s DNA, ready to be transcribed into messenger RNA (mRNA).

These mRNA travel to the ribosomes which translate this into long Gag-Pol polyproteins, which are a bunch of viral proteins joined together.

Now, human cells don’t come with the equipment to process these long polyprotein chains, but one of the enzymes that HIV releases into the cell is a protease called aspartate protease, or HIV-1 protease.

This enzyme cuts the polyprotein into individual, functional viral proteins.

These proteins are then packed together to form new HIV viruses, which bud off from the cell membrane to infect more cells. Very sneaky indeed!

Over time, more and more immune cells are infected, and the immune system begins to fail, which is called immunodeficiency, and this increases the risk of infections and tumors that a healthy immune system would usually be able to fend off.

These complications are referred to as AIDS, or acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.

Now, in order to prevent the formation of new HIV viruses and further infection of the host’s cells, we can use protease inhibitors, or PIs.

As their name implies, protease inhibitors bind and inhibit HIV-1 protease, thereby making it incapable of processing the Gag-Pol polyproteins so new viruses can’t be made.

Common medications in this class include atazanavir, darunavir, indinavir, lopinavir, nelfinavir, saquinavir, tipranavir, and ritonavir.

These medications are rarely used alone since HIV quickly develops resistance to them by point mutations of the pol gene, which is the gene that encodes HIV-1 protease.

Typically, protease inhibitors are used as a part of the highly active antiretroviral therapy, or HAART, along with nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, or NRTIs, like tenofovir.

This is so that, if HIV were to develop a mutation making it resistant to protease inhibitors, then it can still be killed by the NRTIs.

Key Takeaways

Protease inhibitors (PIs) are a class of antiviral drugs that are widely used to manage HIV/AIDS. Protease inhibitors prevent viral replication by selectively binding the enzyme HIV-1 protease, and prevent the formation of new viruses and further infection of the host's cells. Common medications in this class include atazanavir, darunavir, indinavir, lopinavir, tipranavir, and ritonavir. Common side effects of protease inhibitors include gastrointestinal problems such as diarrhea, nausea, and vomiting; and metabolic disorders such as hyperglycemia, insulin resistance, and hyperlipidemia.

Sources

  1. "Katzung & Trevor's Pharmacology Examination and Board Review,12th Edition" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2018)
  2. "Rang and Dale's Pharmacology" Elsevier (2019)
  3. "Goodman and Gilman's The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics, 13th Edition" McGraw-Hill Education / Medical (2017)
  4. "HIV-1 Antiretroviral Drug Therapy" Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Medicine (2012)
  5. "Novel Central Nervous System (CNS)-Targeting Protease Inhibitors for Drug-Resistant HIV Infection and HIV-Associated CNS Complications" Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy (2019)
  6. "Three HIV Drugs, Atazanavir, Ritonavir, and Tenofovir, Coformulated in Drug-Combination Nanoparticles Exhibit Long-Acting and Lymphocyte-Targeting Properties in Nonhuman Primates" Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences (2018)