Title: Professor Stephen Locarnini
1Anti-HBV Drugs Molecular Structure and Antiviral
Activity
- Professor Stephen Locarnini
- Victorian Infectious Diseases Reference
Laboratory, - North Melbourne, Victoria 3051,
- AUSTRALIA
- www.vidrl.org.au/publications/hep_updates.htm
2Hepatitis B Molecular pathogenesis
- HBV replicates its DNA genome via reverse
transcription of pregenomic RNA - HBV is not generally cytopathic to hepatocytes
- Precore protein / HBeAg essential for
establishing persistent infection - Host immune responses (generally inadequate
and/or in appropriate) are responsible for the
liver disease of chronic hepatitis B - Two therapeutic approaches
- (i) direct antiviral agents lamivudine,
adefovir and entecavir. - (ii) immune modulation interferon alpha and
thymosin-alpha
3Key Step 1 Conversion of RC DNA into cccDNA
4Key Step 2 Reverse Transcription
Key Step 1 Conversion of RC DNA into cccDNA
5Early Events cccDNA Generation
Nucleus
ER/Golgi
Cytosol
6Genomic Replication Reverse Transcription
7Late Events Assembly Release Versus Recycling
- Precore protein inhibits core dimerization.
- Precore protein essential for persistent
infection.
8IFN-? (i) 2?5?-OA Synthetase RNaseL(ii) PKR
(iii) MxA
LA PROTEIN
Gordien et al (2001) J Virol 752684
9Inhibition of Reverse Transcription
Nucleos(t)ide Analogues
transport to cell
nucleus
CCC DNA
DNA
uncoating
Attachment and
repair
LA PROTEIN
Penetration
MINICHROMOSOME
Nucleus
Re-entry
pregenomic RNA
HBV RNA
Golgi
transcripts
complex
HBV polymerase
protein
envelope proteins S, M, L
Release
core proteins
Nucleos(t)ide Analogues eg.
LMV, ADV, ETV
HBV DNA SYNTHESIS
Delaney et al (2001) Antiviral Chem Chemother.
121-35
Chain Termination
10What Causes Antiviral Drug Resistance?
- Antiviral drug resistance reflects reduced
susceptibility of a virus to the inhibitory
effect of a drug - Antiviral drug resistance results from a process
of adaptive mutations under therapy - High replication rates
- Low fidelity of the viral polymerase
- Selective pressure of the drug
- Role of replication space (liver turnover)
- Fitness of mutant
11Escape Mutants and Interferon-Alpha Responses
- No specific mutation conclusively associated with
IFN-a treatment failure - In vivo
- Correlation between BCP mutations and poor IFN- a
response for gentypes B and C HBV - (Kao et al (2000) J.Hepatol 33998)
- HBV genotype A is more sensitive to IFN- a than
genotype D - (Erhadt et al (2005) GUT 541009)
- this was independent of HBeAg status
- IFN-a treatment associated with emergence of
novel pre-C sequences, some of which prevent
HBeAg expression - (Gunther et al (1992) Virology 187271)
- In vitro
- HBV genotype C with G1896A precore stop codon
mutation resistant to IFN- a - (Wang et al (2005) World J Gastroenterol 11649)
12Resistance Rates in Naïve Patients Treated with
LMV, ADV or LdT
13Clinical Consequences of Drug Resistant HBV
- Flares in serum ALT
- Reduced HBeAg seroconversion
- Histological progression of liver disease
- Increased recurrence post-OLT
- Changes in HBsAg envelope antigenicity
- Transmission of drug-resistant HBV
14Time to Disease Progression by YMDD StatusFrom
Liaw et al, 2004 NEJM 3511521
25
Placebo (n215)
21
YMDDm (n209) (49)
20
Wild Type (n221)
Placebo
with disease progression
15
13
YMDDm
10
5
5
WT
0
0
6
12
18
24
30
36
Time after randomisation (months)
15Three Groups of Nucleoside/Nucleotide Analogues
used in Chronic Hepatitis B
- L-Nucleoside Group
- lamivudine (3TC)
- emtricitabine (FTC)
- telbivudine (L-dT)
- clevudine (L-FMAU)
- Acyclic Phosphonate Group
- adefovir (PMEA)
- tenofovir (PMPA)
- Cyclopentane/pentene Ring Group
- entecavir
- abacavir/carbovir
16L-Nucleoside Group
LAMIVUDINE
EMTRICITABINE
TELBIVUDINE
CLEVUDINE
17Acyclic Phosphonate Group
18Cyclopentane Group
ABACAVIR / CARBOVIR
ENTECAVIR
19HBV Antiviral Drug Resistance Patterns (Approved
Therapies)
- Monotherapy Lamivudine
- Group 1 rtL180M rtM204V/I
- 2 rtM204I
- 3 rtL80V/I rtM204I
- 4 rtV173L rtL180M rtM204V
- 5rtI169 T rtV173L rtL180M rtM204V
- 6 rtA181T
- 7 rtL180M rtM204S
- 8 rtT184S
- 9 rtQ215S
20HBV Antiviral Drug Resistance Patterns (Approved
Therapies)
- Monotherapy Adefovir Dipivoxil
- Group 1 rtN236T
- 2 rtA181V/T
- 3 rtV84M / rtS85A
- 4 rtV214A / rtQ215S
- Monotherapy Entecavir LMV Backbone
- Group 1 rtI169T rtV173L rtL180M
rtT184G rtS202I rtM204V - Group 2 rtI169T rtV173L rtL180M
rtM204V rtM250V - Group 3 Various Combinations of Mutations at
codons 184, 202 and 250
21HBV Antiviral Drug Resistance Patterns (Under
Investigation)
- Monotherapy Telbivudine
- Group 1 rtM204I
- 2 Other Lamivudine Associated
Mutations ? - Monotherapy Tenofovir
- Group 1 rtL180M rtA194T rtM204V
- 2 rtV214A, rtQ215S
22Key Resistance Mutations
LMV Resistance rtL80V/I rtV173L/rtL180M
rtM204V/I/S rtQ215S L-dT Resistance
rtM204I ADV Resistance rtV84M rtA181T/V rtV214A
rtQ215S rtN236T TDF Resistance
rtA194T/rtV214A/rtQ215S ETV Resistance
rtS184G rtS202I rtM250V
23Resistance Mutations Associated with the
Nucleos(t)ide Analogue Class
Selection of LAM-Resistant Mutants Affects Future
Treatment Options
24Molecular Mechanisms of Antiviral Resistance in
Hepatitis B
- Mutations Cause
- Impaired Incorporation of NA into viral DNA
resulting in reduced binding affinity. - (i) Steric Hindrance
- Catalytic domain mutations alter the ability of
the POL to bind NA relative to the natural
substrate (dNTP) - (ii) Catalytic Efficiency
- Suboptimal nucleophilic attack geometry for
incorporation of NA into viral DNA
25HBV Polymerase
Orange Domain A Yellow Domain B Green Domain
C Red Domain F White Domain D Pink Domain E
Bartholomeusz et al (2004) Antiviral Therapy
9149-60.
26HBV Polymerase LMV Resistance
Bartholomeusz et al (2004) Antiviral Therapy
9149.
273 Clusters of ADV Mutations
Orange Domain A Yellow Domain B Green Domain
C Red Domain F White Domain D Pink Domain E
Group 2
Group 1
Group 3
Bartholomeusz et al (2004) Hepatology 40(No. 4
Suppl.1)246A Abstract 185
28Wildtype rtN236
rtN236T
Indirect perturbation of the triphosphate binding
site and alteration of the Mg binding site
Wild type HBV polymerase with ADV
29Group 2 ADV Mutations
Wildtype
rtA181V
Indirect steric hinderance via the C domain
rtM204
Wild type HBV polymerase with ADV
30Group 3 ADV Mutations rtQ215S
Wild Type
rtQ215S
- Mutations in the C-D hinge region can potentially
alter both the C and the D Domain relative to the
active site - rtQ215S mutation located on the external region
of RT. - Potential to alter the interaction with the
Polymerase complex (TP, Spacer or RNAse H).
31Role of rtM250V in ETV Resistance
Wild type Pol with Entecavir
rtM250V with Entecavir
- M250V alters the binding interaction between the
primer stand and the incoming dNTP (Entecavir)
- M250 interacts with the primer strand
Warner et al (2004) Hepatology 40(No. 4
Suppl.1)245A Abstract 183
32ETV Resistance Group 2
Wild type polymerase
rtT184G rtS202I
- Altered geometry of the Nucleotide Binding pocket
- rtT184 and rtS202 stabilize the interaction
between the B and C domains
33Indications of Emergence of Drug-Resistant Virus
- 1. Increasing viral load (?1.0 log IU/ml)
- 2. Increasing serum ALT level
- 3. Clinical deterioration
- 4. Identification of known genotypic markers of
drug resistance within viral polymerase
34Antiviral Treatment Failure
35Management of Patients With Drug-Resistant
Hepatitis B
typically Lamivudine
36Management of Patients With Drug-Resistant
Hepatitis B
typically Lamivudine
37Ways to Prevent Resistance (D. Richman)
- Maximize antiviral activity
- increase maximum tolerated dose
- select most effective regimen
- nucleoside analogue potentiation
- Maximize genetic barriers to resistance
- avoid sequential therapy
- choose drugs requiring multiple resistance
mutations - choose drugs where patient is naïve
- Increase pharmacologic barriers
- patient compliance
- raising trough levels
- tissue distribution (no sanctuaries)
38New Targets/New Directions for Hepatitis B Therapy
39Immune Based ApproachThe Innate Immune System
- Evolutionarily ancient
- Universal - all multicellular organisms
- Constitutive - germ-line
- Immediate pathogen response (hours)
- Components Pattern Recognition Central
- Pattern recognition receptors pathogen-assoc.
molecular patterns - Cell-surface eg Toll-like receptors
- Secreted
- Intracellular
- Phagocytes eg. dendritic cells
- Antimicrobial peptides eg. cathelicidins,
defensins - Alternate complement pathway
40TLRs What Are They?
- Type I integral membrane glycoproteins
- Members of larger superfamily that includes IL-1
receptors (considerable homology in cytoplasmic
regions) - Highly conserved
Akira S, Takeda K (2004) Toll-like receptor
signalling Nat Rev Immunol 4499-511
41TLR Signaling
IFN?/?
TNF?
Akira S, Takeda K. (2004) Toll-like receptor
signalling. Nat Rev Immunol 4499-511.
42IMPAIRED TOLL-LIKE RECEPTOR EXPRESSION IN CHRONIC
HEPATITIS B IMPLICATIONS FOR PATHOGENESIS AND
THERAPY
- Visvanathan K1, Skinner N1, Riordan S2, Sozzi V3
, Edwards R3, Chang J4, Lewis S4 and Locarnini S3.
1Murdoch Childrens Research Institute,
Melbourne, Australia 2Gastrointestinal and Liver
Unit, The Prince of Wales Hospital and University
of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia, 3Victorian
Infectious Diseases Reference Laboratory,
Melbourne, Australia and 4Alfred Hospital,
Melbourne Australia.
Hepatology 40 (No. 4, Suppl 1) 2004 598A
Abstract 1005)
43In vivo Correlation of the Precore TLR
Relationship in HBeAg-positive and negative CH-B
44HBeAg and TLR Expression Hep G-2 Transduced
HBeAg-Pos or HBeAg-Neg / Recombinant
HBV-Baculovirus
45TOLL 2 Precore Interaction
46TOLL 2 Precore Interaction
47Summary and Conclusion
- TLRs expressed on hepatocytes in vivo and in
vitro - TLRs expressed on Kupffer cells in vivo
- Precore protein/HBeAg downregulates TLR-2
expression and functional signalling - Absence of Precore protein/HBeAg upregulates
TLR-2 expression and functional signalling - Identification of an important interaction of the
precore protein/HBeAg and the innate immune
response to HBV - Substantial pathogenic and therapeutic
implications in the management of HBeAg-Pos and
HBeAg-Neg CH-B
48Future Directions Drug Resistance
- resistance emerges when replication occurs in the
presence of the drug selection pressure - (No Replication No Resistance NRNR)
- the best cost-effective strategy is to prevent or
avoid the emergence of antiviral drug-resistance - combination chemotherapy should increase the
efficiency of antiviral therapy - select patients for therapy who are most likely
to HBeAg-seroconvert and/or sustain the
virological suppression achieved with antiviral
therapy - develop better treatment strategies based on
viral replication and molecular pathogenesis - HAART-type approach PLUS Innate Immune Based
Therapies