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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, July 2002, p. 2179-2184, Vol. 46, No. 7
0066-4804/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.46.7.2179-2184.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
ATP-Dependent Removal of Nucleoside Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors by Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Reverse Transcriptase
Lisa K. Naeger, Nicolas A. Margot, and Michael D. Miller*
Gilead Sciences, Inc., Foster City, California 94404
Received 8 November 2001/
Returned for modification 5 February 2002/
Accepted 8 April 2002

ABSTRACT
Removal of nucleoside chain terminator inhibitors mediated by
human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) reverse transcriptase (RT)
using ATP as an acceptor molecule has been proposed as a novel
mechanism of HIV resistance. Recombinant wild-type and mutant
HIV type 1 (HIV-1) RT enzymes with thymidine analog resistance
mutations D67N, K70R, and T215Y were analyzed for their ability
to remove eight nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors
in the presence of physiological concentrations of ATP. The
order for the rate of removal of the eight inhibitors by the
mutant RT enzyme was zidovudine (AZT) > stavudine (d4T) >>
zalcitabine (ddC) > abacavir > amdoxovir (DAPD) > lamivudine
(3TC) > didanosine (ddI) > tenofovir. Thymidine analogs
AZT and d4T were the most significantly removed by the mutant
enzyme, suggesting that removal of these inhibitors by the ATP-dependent
removal mechanism contributes to the AZT and d4T resistance
observed in patients with HIV expressing thymidine analog resistance
mutations. ATP-dependent removal of tenofovir was 22- to 35-fold
less efficient than removal of d4T and AZT, respectively. The
addition of ATP and the next complementary deoxynucleoside triphosphate
caused a reduction of ATP-mediated removal of d4T, ddC, and
DAPD, while AZT and abacavir removal was unaffected. The reduction
of d4T, ddC, and DAPD removal in the presence of the deoxynucleoside
triphosphate could explain the minor changes in susceptibility
to these drugs observed in conventional in vitro phenotypic
assays using cells that have higher deoxynucleoside triphosphate
pools. The minimal removal of abacavir, ddC, DAPD, 3TC, ddI,
and tenofovir is consistent with the minor changes in susceptibility
to these drugs observed for HIV mutants with thymidine analog
resistance mutations.

INTRODUCTION
A large proportion of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected
patient population in developed countries have had prior antiretroviral
therapy experience and have taken multiple nucleoside reverse
transcriptase (RT) inhibitors (NRTIs). HIV in many of these
patients has developed mutations conferring resistance to the
NRTIs. Mutations in RT could confer resistance either by decreasing
incorporation of inhibitors or by increasing the removal of
inhibitors after they are incorporated. For a number of NRTI
mutations, most notably for thymidine analog resistance mutations
including D67N, K70R, and T215Y/F, changes in relative binding
affinities or incorporation of inhibitors by mutant RT enzymes
do not appear to correlate with drug susceptibility changes
in viral replication assays (
7,
14,
15,
25). However, a mechanism
by which inhibitors can be removed by HIV-1 RT after they are
incorporated has recently been described, and this removal may
contribute to zidovudine (AZT) resistance of some HIV type 1
(HIV-1) mutants (
1,
6,
19,
21). Retroviral RTs lack a 3' exonuclease
proofreading activity (
3,
28) but are capable of pyrophosphorolysis,
the reverse reaction of nucleotide polymerization. In this process,
RT complexed with a dideoxynucleoside monophosphate (ddNMP)-terminated
primer/template binds pyrophosphate or ATP and catalyzes the
removal of the chain-terminating ddNMP from the primer, resulting
in an unblocked DNA chain. It has been shown that an RT mutant
with D67N, K70R, T215F, and K219Q mutations removes more AZT
from an AZT-terminated DNA primer than wild-type RT by both
pyrophosphate- and ATP-dependent removal mechanisms (
1,
19).
HIV-1 RT can carry out the ATP-dependent chain terminator removal
reaction at physiological concentrations of ATP (1 to 4 mM)
(
21). The most physiologically relevant acceptor molecule for
removal of chain terminators as a mechanism of resistance in
vivo is currently unresolved. It has been reported that the
physiological concentrations of pyrophosphate are below the
Kd for the reverse reaction (
2,
29). However, the physiological
concentrations of ATP are within the range of the
Km for ATP
(0.7 to 4.3 mM), suggesting that ATP is the most likely acceptor
for the chain terminator removal reaction in vivo (
21,
32).
In additional experiments, it was demonstrated that the next incoming deoxynucleoside triphosphate (dNTP) can form a dead-end complex and inhibit the ATP-dependent removal of stavudine (d4T) but not AZT by HIV-1 RT (20). Removal of d4T by both wild-type and mutant RT was inhibited by the next incoming complementary dNTP at micromolar to submicromolar concentrations, whereas AZT removal was much less sensitive (>50-fold) to inhibition by the next complementary dNTP (20).
Here we have compared the ATP-dependent removal of eight NRTIs by an RT mutant containing the common thymidine analog mutations D67N, K70R, and T215Y in both the presence and absence of the next complementary dNTP. The NRTIs analyzed include those that are currently approved for HIV treatment, AZT, d4T, didanosine (ddI), abacavir, zalcitabine (ddC), lamivudine (3TC), and tenofovir, and one that is in clinical development, amdoxovir (DAPD). Our results show that an HIV-1 mutant RT with common thymidine analog resistance mutations can increase the removal rate of thymidine analogs in the presence of physiological concentrations of ATP and suggest that this ATP-mediated inhibitor removal has effects on the drug susceptibility of HIV with thymidine analog resistance mutations.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Recombinant RT construction, purification, and kinetic analyses.
Wild-type RT expression construct pRT66, described previously
(
10), was a gift from M. Wainberg. The
pol sequences were amplified
by PCR from the HXB2D molecular clone of HIV-1 and cloned into
expression vector pKK223-3 (Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, N.J.).
An RT mutant with D67N, K70R, and T215Y mutations was generated
by oligonucleotide-based site-directed mutagenesis, constructs
were completely sequenced, and RT purification was performed
as previously described (
25). This mutant was analyzed because
of reduced susceptibility resulting from the T215Y mutation
(
25) and prior evidence of increased pyrophosphorolysis resulting
from D67N and K70R (
1,
19).
Recombinant HIV production and antiviral susceptibility assays.
PCR fragments corresponding to the first 1,000 bp of the coding sequences for wild-type HIV RT and the HIV RT mutant with D67N, K70R, and T215Y mutations were amplified and cotransfected with HIV-1 proviral molecular clone pHXB2-2-261RT, in which the coding sequence for RT is deleted (a gift from C. Boucher) as previously described (4, 23). Replication-competent viruses generated by homologous recombination were harvested after 8 to 18 days when the cultures contained notable syncytia. The genotypes of the recombinant viruses were determined by RT-PCR of viral supernatant followed by sequencing using an ALF Express automated DNA sequencer (Pharmacia Biotech).
Susceptibilities of the recombinant mutant viruses and the wild-type HIV-1 molecular clone HXB2D to tenofovir, AZT, d4T, ddC, abacavir, ß-D-dioxolane guanosine (DXG), ddI, and 3TC were evaluated by using a modified XTT (2,3-bis[2-methoxy-4-nitro-5-sulfophenyl]-2H-tetrazolium-5-carboxanilide)-based assay of MT-2 cells as previously described (8). All infections were performed with 1.2 x 106 cells at a multiplicity of infection of approximately 0.001 virus particle/cell which resulted in equal levels of cell killing in the absence of the drug over the 5-day assay period. Values for the 50% inhibitory concentration were calculated as averages from three to eight experiments.
Chain terminator removal assay.
The base for nucleoside analogs AZT and d4T is thymidine, that for ddC and 3TC is cytidine, that for carbovir and DXG is guanosine, and that for ddA and tenofovir is adenosine. Primers corresponding to the natural tRNA primer binding site were 5' end labeled with [
-33P]ATP and T4 polynucleotide kinase and terminated essentially as described previously with a 191-bp pHIV-PBS RNA template (1). A 16-nucleotide (nt) prPBS primer, 5'-GTC CCT GTT CGG GCG C-3', was used for ddA, tenofovir, ddC, and 3TC termination, and 18-nt prPBS primer 5'-GTC CCT GTT CGG GCG CCA-3' was used for d4T, AZT, DXG, and carbovir termination. The lengths of the chain-terminated primers were 18 nt for ddA and tenofovir termination, 19 nt for ddC and 3TC termination, 20 nt for d4T and AZT termination, and 21 nt for DXG and carbovir termination. Longer 24-nt ddA- and tenofovir-terminated primers with the sequence 5'-GTC CCT GTT CGG GCG CCA CTG CTA-3' were also tested for removal of ddA and tenofovir. The end-labeled chain-terminated primers were gel purified twice on a 16% polyacrylamide-8 M urea sequencing gel, excised, and eluted in a solution containing 0.5 M ammonium acetate, 10 mM Tris, pH 7.5, 0.1 mM EDTA, 2 mM MgCl2, and 0.01% sodium dodecyl sulfate, followed by desalting through NAP10 columns (Pharmacia Biotech). The purified primers were annealed to a pHIV-PBS RNA template, and a 2.5 nM template/chain-terminated primer was incubated with 20 nM mutant recombinant RT enzyme for 5 min at 37°C in RT buffer. Then ATP (3.2 mM final concentration) was added. Experiments analyzing the effect of the next complementary nucleotide included the addition of 50 µM (final concentration) dCTP for the tenofovir-, ddA-, DXG-, and carbovir-terminated primers/templates, dTTP for ddC- and 3TC-terminated primers/templates, and dGTP for the AZT- and d4T-terminated primers/templates. The dNTPs were added at the same time as the ATP to start the reaction. Reactions were stopped by the addition of an equivalent amount of sequencing gel loading buffer at 0, 2.5, 5, 10, and 20 min. Samples were heated at 95°C, run on 16% polyacrylamide-8 M urea sequencing gel, and quantitated by PhosphorImager analysis. The percentages removed shown in Fig. 2 and 3 were determined by quantitating the upper chain-terminated primer band, dividing this by the total for all bands in the lane, and subtracting from 100%. No degradation of the primer band was detected when each RT enzyme was incubated with the template/primer for 15 to 30 min at 37°C in the absence of ATP or sodium pyrophosphate, thus ruling out exonuclease activity. The ATP (Pharmacia Biotech) is 98% triphosphate and 99.5% adenosine by fast protein liquid chromatography. For comparison of wild-type RT and the mutant RT, 2.5 nM template/chain-terminated primer was incubated with 20 nM wild-type or mutant recombinant RT enzymes, with equivalent activity determined as previously described (25), for 5 min at 37°C in RT buffer and then ATP (3.2 mM final concentration) was added for 0, 15, 45, and 90 min as shown in Fig. 4 (0, 15, and 45 min for d4T). Catalytic efficiencies for removal of AZT, d4T, and tenofovir from terminated primers by wild-type and mutant RT were determined at ATP concentrations of 0.36, 1.1, 2.2, 3.2, and 4.5 mM at 0.1, 1.5, 3, 10, and 30 min, respectively. The Vmax for ATP-dependent removal and the Km for ATP were determined by using the Michaelis-Menten hyperbolic relationship curve and fitting to the equation y = (Vmaxx)/(Km + x) with SigmaPlot, version 4.01. The second-order rate constant, or catalytic efficiency, was determined by calculating kcat from Vmax and dividing by the Km for ATP.

RESULTS
Removal by the ATP-dependent chain terminator removal mechanism.
We evaluated the ATP-dependent chain terminator removal of NRTIs
using a mutant RT enzyme containing mutations D67N, K70R, and
T215Y. Removal of the active metabolites of NRTIs AZT, d4T,
ddI, abacavir, ddC, 3TC, DAPD, and tenofovir were analyzed.
The active metabolites of ddI, abacavir, and DAPD are ddA, carbovir,
and DXG, respectively. The thymidine analogs, AZT and d4T, were
most efficiently removed by the addition of ATP, with 21% of
the AZT removed and 13% of the d4T removed at 20 min (Fig.
1 and
2). There was reduced removal of ddC, carbovir, DXG, 3TC,
ddA, and tenofovir compared to removal of AZT and d4T, with
less than 5% of these chain terminators removed by 20 min. The
order of removal at 20 min was determined from multiple experiments
as AZT (21%) > d4T (13%) >> ddC (5%) > carbovir (3%) >
DXG (2%) > 3TC (1.4%) > ddA (1.2%) > tenofovir (1%)
(Fig.
2). Rates of removal were as follows: AZT, 1.8%/min; d4T,
0.64%/min; ddC, 0.26%/min, carbovir, 0.13%/min; DXG, 0.08%/min;
3TC, 0.07%/min; ddA, 0.06%/min; tenofovir, 0.05%/min. No difference
in removal of ddA and tenofovir was seen when a longer chain-terminated
primer of 24 nt was also used (data not shown). Therefore, the
inefficient removal of ddA and tenofovir in these experiments
does not appear to be primer length dependent.
Drug susceptibility in viral replication assays.
The antiviral drug susceptibilities of the mutant virus to the
eight NRTIs were determined (Table
1). The mutant showed a 24-fold
decrease in susceptibility to AZT compared to wild-type virus
but less than fourfold changes in susceptibility to the other
drugs (Table
1). The drug susceptibility results with these
recombinant RT mutant viruses are similar to the drug susceptibility
results obtained from patient viruses containing these mutations
in a background of additional RT mutations (
23). The efficient
ATP-dependent removal of AZT by the mutant RT is consistent
with the significant decrease in susceptibility of the mutant
virus. The inefficient removal of ddC, carbovir, DXG, ddA, 3TC,
and tenofovir by the RT mutant is also consistent with the minor
changes in the susceptibility of the mutant virus to these inhibitors.
Effect of the next complementary nucleotide on chain terminator removal.
The increase in ATP-dependent removal of d4T seen with the mutant
RT appears inconsistent with the in vitro susceptibility changes
seen for d4T. We have demonstrated efficient removal of d4T
with an RT containing thymidine analog resistance mutations,
in agreement with the results of others (Fig.
1 and
2) (
20).
However, susceptibility shifts of less than twofold to d4T for
viruses with thymidine analog resistance mutations are observed
in phenotypic in vitro susceptibility assays, therefore showing
little cross-resistance between d4T and AZT (Table
1) (
11,
16,
18,
27). Nevertheless, thymidine analog resistance mutations
are selected in d4T-treated patients (
9,
17,
18,
26,
30,
31),
and patients with thymidine analog resistance mutations show
reduced responses to d4T therapy (
24,
26). An explanation for
this apparent discrepancy between in vitro phenotypic data and
clinical results has recently been described: the next incoming
complementary dNTP can inhibit removal of some NRTIs by forming
a dead-end complex (
19,
20).
We analyzed the effect of the next complementary nucleotide on removal of each of the NRTIs (Fig. 1 and 3). The presence of the next nucleotide had little effect on the removal of AZT and carbovir. However, removal of d4T, ddC, and DXG was decreased by more than threefold in the presence of the next dNTP. The minimal removal of tenofovir, 3TC, and ddA made it difficult to assess the effect of the next complementary dNTP. Our results support the data of others showing that removal of d4T by RT was inhibited by the next complementary dNTP, whereas AZT removal was much less sensitive to this inhibition (20).
Catalytic efficiencies for removal of AZT, d4T, and tenofovir by wild-type and mutant RT.
Removal of AZT and d4T by wild-type RT was detectable but reduced compared to removal by the mutant RT (Table 2 and Fig. 4). Removal of the other NRTIs by wild-type RT was minimal (data not shown). ATP-dependent removal of the thymidine analogs, AZT and d4T, was compared to removal of the adenosine analog, tenofovir, by both wild-type and mutant RT. When ATP was added at a physiological concentration, AZT and d4T were readily removed by both wild-type RT and the RT mutant within 15 min (Fig. 4). Removal of tenofovir by both wild-type RT and mutant RT was not easily detectable even for incubation periods of up to 90 min (Fig. 4). The catalytic efficiencies (kcat/Km) of ATP-dependent removal of AZT, d4T, and tenofovir were determined for both the wild-type and mutant RT enzymes. AZT and d4T were both removed by the ATP-dependent mechanism more efficiently than tenofovir: 15-fold more efficiently by wild-type RT and 35-fold and 22-fold more efficiently, respectively, by the mutant RT (Table 2). The catalytic efficiencies of ATP-dependent removal of these inhibitors in the presence of the next complementary dNTP were also determined (Table 2). Tenofovir was minimally removed by the mutant RT, with a catalytic efficiency of 1.7 x 104 to 1.9 x 104 M-1 s-1 regardless of the presence of the next complementary dNTP. AZT removal by the mutant RT was not significantly decreased by the next complementary dNTP, maintaining a fourfold increase in removal efficiency compared to that for wild-type RT. Consistent with our results above, d4T removal by the ATP-dependent mechanism was decreased in the presence of the next dNTP from 38 x 104 M-1 s-1 to 14 x 104 M-1 s-1, returning the efficiency of removal to the level for the wild-type RT.
ATP-dependent removal and drug susceptibility.
The RT mutant demonstrated increased efficiency of removal of
AZT, d4T, and tenofovir compared to wild-type RT (Table
2 and
Fig.
4). AZT was removed four- to fivefold more efficiently
by the mutant RT than by wild-type RT, further supporting the
observations of others that increased AZT removal by RT mutants
with thymidine analog resistance mutations may contribute to
the significant decrease in the AZT susceptibility of viruses
containing these mutations. The mutant RT showed a less-than-twofold
increase in tenofovir removal compared to wild-type RT. These
results are consistent with the twofold changes in tenofovir
susceptibility (Table
1). The mutant RT removes d4T threefold
more efficiently by the ATP-dependent removal mechanism than
wild-type RT (Table
2). However, we have demonstrated that the
presence of the next dNTP can inhibit d4T removal and decrease
the efficiency of d4T removal by the RT mutant to levels comparable
to those for wild-type RT (Table
2), which is consistent with
the less-than-twofold change in d4T susceptibility seen for
this mutant (Table
1).

DISCUSSION
The lack of correlation between changes in inhibitor binding
for AZT and the significant changes in AZT susceptibility for
viruses with thymidine analog resistance mutations has led to
research into other resistance mechanisms. Recent work has suggested
that an increased rate of AZT excision by pyrophosphorolysis
(reverse nucleotide polymerization) or a similar mechanism using
ATP instead of pyrophosphate could account for part of the AZT
resistance resulting from thymidine analog resistance mutations
(
1,
6,
19,
21). Our results confirm that HIV-1 RT can remove
chain-terminating RT inhibitors in the presence of physiological
concentrations of ATP. A comparison of levels of ATP-dependent
chain terminator removal of NRTIs by a mutant RT containing
common thymidine analog resistance mutations D67N, K70R, and
T215Y demonstrated that the thymidine analogs, AZT and d4T,
were the most efficiently removed. This mutant RT showed intermediate
levels of removal of ddC, carbovir, and DXG, followed by minimal
removal of 3TC, ddA, and tenofovir. The inefficient removal
of ddC, carbovir, DXG, ddA, 3TC, and tenofovir by the RT mutant
is consistent with the minor in vitro changes in the susceptibility
of the mutant virus to these inhibitors.
The addition of ATP and the next complementary dNTP reduced ATP-mediated removal of d4T, ddC, and DXG, while AZT and carbovir removal was unaffected. Tenofovir, ddA, and 3TC were minimally removed in the presence or absence of the next complementary dNTP. The catalytic efficiency of tenofovir removal by the mutant RT enzyme was 35- and 22-fold less efficient than removal of AZT and d4T, respectively. Furthermore, mutant RT showed a less-than-twofold increase in tenofovir removal compared to wild-type RT, consistent with the twofold changes in tenofovir susceptibility for the mutant virus. AZT removal by the mutant RT remained four- to fivefold more efficient than that by wild-type RT even in the presence of the next dNTP, consistent with susceptibility changes for HIV mutants with thymidine analog resistance mutations and showing AZT resistance. A mutant containing thymidine analog mutations M41L and K219Q in addition to D67N, K70R, and T215Y has been analyzed and has been shown to have a 131-fold decrease in tenofovir removal compared to AZT removal. Tenofovir removal by the mutant RT with M41L, D67N, K70R, T215Y, K219Q mutations is not significantly different from that of wild-type RT, but AZT removal is increased by sevenfold compared to that by wild-type RT. These results are consistent with the changes in the susceptibility of the mutant viruses to these inhibitors (L. K. Naeger, unpublished results).
While d4T is readily removed by the RT mutant with D67N, K70R, T215Y mutations, the next incoming dNTP can inhibit the efficiency of d4T removal by the mutant to levels comparable to those for wild-type RT. These findings with d4T suggest that current in vitro antiviral phenotypic assays may not adequately measure susceptibility to d4T. The higher dNTP concentrations of the activated peripheral blood lymphocytes and transformed human cells used in in vitro phenotypic assays (11-13) may inhibit removal of d4T. Cell culture results for HIV-1 containing thymidine analog resistance mutations commonly demonstrate resistance to AZT and sensitivity to d4T, but the true cross-resistance of d4T in these cells may be masked by high dNTP concentrations. Under conditions of low dNTP levels (e.g., quiescent primary T cells or macrophages), d4T removal would be expected to occur at a higher efficiency, thus possibly explaining the observed in vivo cross-resistance to d4T of HIV-1 mutants containing thymidine analog resistance mutations. The inhibition of ddC and DXG removal by the next complementary dNTP also suggests that current in vitro phenotypic assays showing less-than-twofold changes in ddC and DXG susceptibility for viruses producing RT mutants with thymidine analog resistance mutations may not adequately reflect their in vivo susceptibilities.
The modeling of an AZT-terminated primer/template with HIV-1 RT has shown that translocation of the terminating AZT to the P site (primer site) from the N site (incoming dNTP site) would result in the azide group of AZT having unfavorable interactions (steric clash) with amino acid D185, suggesting that the AZT-terminated end of the primer would preferentially occupy the N site and block the incoming dNTP (5). Furthermore, if the terminated AZT primer end translocated to the P site, steric hindrance from the azide group would interfere with the binding of the incoming dNTP. Therefore, AZT is more likely to occupy the N position, even when dNTPs are present, compared to other dideoxynucleoside triphosphates, resulting in AZT being in a favorable position for removal by ATP. Conversely, dideoxynucleotides, such as d4T, where there is no steric hindrance, would likely favor the P position rather than N position so that the incoming dNTP could interfere with their removal (5). These results support the biochemical data of our group and others showing that removal of AZT is not inhibited by the next incoming dNTP, whereas removal of d4T is inhibited (5). Furthermore, the modeling performed by Boyer et al. proposes that mutations M41L, D67N, K70R, T215Y, and K219Q enhance ATP binding to HIV-1 RT so that, at physiological concentrations of ATP, removal would be expected to be more efficient regardless of the nucleotide (5). Consequently, the specificity of the removal reaction is not dictated by the mutations conferring resistance but rather depends on the structure of the region around the active site of HIV-1 RT and the structure of the nucleoside analog.
The reduced removal of tenofovir might result from the unique phosphonate bond of tenofovir or the unique acyclic structure of tenofovir. The incorporation of tenofovir into the primer may favor the P site rather than the N site, resulting in tenofovir being less accessible to removal by ATP, opposite to what was proposed for AZT. Analyses of crystal structures of tenofovir-terminated primers/templates with HIV-1 RT to address this possibility are under way. Similarly, inefficient removal of 3TC and ddA may also occur because these nucleoside analogs favor the P site rather than the N site. It is also interesting that both tenofovir and ddA are inefficiently removed by ATP, suggesting that adenosine analogs are less likely to be removed by this mechanism than other nucleoside analogs. Our in vitro results reported here showing reduced tenofovir removal by a mutant RT with thymidine analog resistance mutations are consistent with clinical results that have demonstrated significant anti-HIV activity of tenofovir disoproxil fumarate in antiretroviral-experienced patients with extensive resistance mutations, including thymidine analog resistance mutations, in their HIV (22; R. Schooley, R. Myers, P. Ruane, G. Beall, H. Lampiris, M. Miller, R. Mills, and I. McGowan, Abstr. 40th Intersci. Conf. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother., abstr. 692, p. 293, 2000).

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Craig Gibbs, Mick Hitchcock, and Kirsten Lofgren White
for review of the manuscript and Melanie Lehwalder for administrative
support.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: 333 Lakeside Dr., Foster City, CA 94404. Phone: (650) 522-5584. Fax: (650) 522-5890. E-mail:
michael_miller{at}gilead.com.


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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, July 2002, p. 2179-2184, Vol. 46, No. 7
0066-4804/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.46.7.2179-2184.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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