Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Infection


Viral Protease


Protease

When viral RNA is translated into a polypeptide sequence, that sequence is assembled in a long chain that includes several individual proteins (reverse transcriptase, protease, integrase). Before these enzymes become functional, they must be cut from the longer polypeptide chain. Viral protease cuts the long chain into its individual enzyme components which then facilitate the production of new viruses.


Protease Inhibitors


DNA->Protease Inhibitor

Inhibitors of this viral protease can be used to fight HIV infection. By blocking the ability of the protease to cleave the viral polypeptide into functional enzymes, protease inhibitors interfere with continued infection.

Mutations enable HIV to avoid treatments that involve only one drug, so there is growing use of multiple-drug therapies in which both a protease inhibitor AND a reverse transcript inhibitor are combined.


Return to Overview of HIV Infection.

HIV Infection Diagram

1. ATTACHMENT
Getting in

2. REVERSE TRANSCRIPTION
From viral RNA to DNA

3. INTEGRATION, TRANSCRIPTION
a. Viral DNA joins host DNA
b. Making multiple viral RNAs

4. TRANSLATION
Producing viral proteins

5. VIRAL PROTEASE
Cleaving viral proteins

6. ASSEMBLY & BUDDING
Getting out