Biochemical Characterization of the HIV-1 Integrase 3‘-Processing Activity and Its Inhibition by Phosphorothioate Oligonucleotides

Abstract
To better understand HIV-1 integrase (IN) functions, we determined the kinetic parameters of the 3‘-processing reaction. Steady-state kinetic analysis performed using Dixon plots indicated that the concentration of active enzyme was 10-fold lower than that calculated by protein determination. The turnover number was low, suggesting that IN remained bound to DNA after cleavage. The catalytic efficiency increased 10-fold from 30 to 37 ˚C and 2-fold from 37 to 42 ˚C. In enzyme assays carried out at 37 ˚C, both single- and double-stranded phosphorothioate oligos bound to IN with an efficiency comparable to that of the phosphodiester duplex substrate. The competition efficiency of single-stranded oligos was directly related to the sequence length. On the other hand, phosphorothioate duplex U5 LTRs modified in the plus strand were capable of both competing with the substrate and directly inhibiting the 3‘-processing activity. These results suggest that, in addition to other modes of action (inhibition of gp120-CD4 interaction and reverse transcriptase), phosphorothioate hetero- and homopolimeric oligos also potently inhibit the IN activity.