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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, June 2004, p. 2260-2266, Vol. 48, No. 6
0066-4804/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.48.6.2260-2266.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Mutations Conferring Resistance to a Potent Hepatitis C Virus Serine Protease Inhibitor In Vitro
Liangjun Lu,1* Tami J. Pilot-Matias,1 Kent D. Stewart,2 John T. Randolph,1 Ron Pithawalla,1 Wenping He,1 Peggy P. Huang,1 Larry L. Klein,1 Hongmei Mo,1 and Akhteruzzaman Molla1
Antiviral Research,1
Structural Biology, Abbott Laboratories, Global Pharmaceutical Research and Development, Abbott Park, Illinois2
Received 17 November 2003/
Returned for modification 21 January 2004/
Accepted 3 February 2004

ABSTRACT
BILN 2061 is a novel, specific hepatitis C virus (HCV) NS3 serine
protease inhibitor discovered by Boehringer Ingelheim that has
shown potent activity against HCV replicons in tissue culture
and is currently under clinical investigation for the treatment
of HCV infection. The poor fidelity of the HCV RNA-dependent
RNA polymerase will likely lead to the development of drug-resistant
viruses in treated patients. The development of resistance to
BILN 2061 was studied by the in vitro passage of HCV genotype
1b replicon cells in the presence of a fixed concentration of
the drug. Three weeks posttreatment, four colonies were expanded
for genotypic and phenotypic characterization. The 50% inhibitory
concentrations of BILN 2061 for these colonies were 72- to 1,228-fold
higher than that for the wild-type replicon. Sequencing of the
individual colonies identified several mutations in the NS3
serine protease gene. Molecular clones containing the single
amino acid substitution A156T, R155Q, or D168V resulted in 357-fold,
24-fold, and 144-fold reductions in susceptibility to BILN 2061,
respectively, compared to the level of susceptibility shown
by the wild-type replicon. Modeling studies indicate that all
three of these residues are located in close proximity to the
inhibitor binding site. These findings, in addition to the three-dimensional
structure analysis of the NS3/NS4A serine protease inhibitor
complex, provide a strategic guide for the development of next-generation
inhibitors of HCV NS3/NS4A serine protease.

INTRODUCTION
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is believed to be the leading
cause of chronic hepatitis, end-stage cirrhosis, and hepatocellular
carcinoma, affecting over 4 million Americans and about 170
million people worldwide. Currently, the most effective treatment
of HCV infection involves a combination of the nucleoside analog
ribavirin with alpha interferon (IFN-

). However, the regimen
is prolonged and not well tolerated, and only approximately
half of the genotype 1 HCV-infected individuals have a sustained
virological response, although the response rate improves significantly
(

80%) when genotypes 2 and 3 are treated (
7,
29). An oral agent
that offers promise as an efficacious alternative to IFN or
that may be used in IFN-containing regimens and that improves
efficacy and/or the side effect profile is in great demand.
The HCV genome is a 9.6-kb single-stranded RNA of positive polarity encoding a large polyprotein that is posttranslationally cleaved into structural and nonstructural proteins (3, 12, 23). The N-terminal domain (approximately 180 amino acids) of NS3 and the small hydrophobic NS4A protein compose a heterodimeric enzyme catalyzing the posttranslational processing of the HCV nonstructural proteins (1, 2, 23). Its structure has been extensively studied by X-ray crystallography (9, 30, 31) and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1, 6). The proteolytic activity of NS3/NS4A serine protease is known to be essential for viral RNA replication (10, 14). A recent study indicated that the NS3/NS4A serine protease also blocks activities of IFN regulatory factor 3, a key cellular antiviral signaling molecule associated with host cellular control of viral infection. Therefore, the inhibition of NS3/NS4A serine protease could potentially block HCV replication and restore IFN regulatory factor 3 control of the viral infection (11).
The development of inhibitors of the HCV NS3/NS4A serine protease has been difficult because of the smooth and shallow surface of its binding site, but significant progress has been made recently in the development of peptide inhibitors (17, 18, 22, 25, 26, 27; C. Lin, K. Lin, C. A. Gates, S. Ma, D. Brennan, J. Fulghum, H.-M. Hsiao, G. Rao, Y. Wei, J. Alford, R. B. Perni, and A. D. Kwong, Hepatology 38, Suppl. 1, Pt. 4, abstr. 1000, 2003) based on the integrated efforts of chemistry, molecular biology, enzymology, and molecular modeling. The first serine protease inhibitor to enter clinical development, BILN 2061, is a macrocyclic tripeptide that is highly potent in the HCV replicon cell model system and is a specific inhibitor of HCV serine protease (16). In both IFN treatment-experienced and naïve patients with genotype 1 infections, the administration twice daily of a 25-, 200-, or 500-mg dose of BILN 2061 resulted in a 2- to 3-log reduction of HCV RNA within 48 h after treatment (16).
Resistance to protease inhibitors has been observed both in vitro and in patients treated with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) protease inhibitors and is due to specific mutations in the protease that lead to decreased phenotypic susceptibility to the drugs (20, 21). Because of the poor fidelity rate of HCV polymerase, drug-resistant mutations will likely develop in patients treated with HCV serine protease inhibitors as well. In fact, in vitro selection of HCV replicons resistant to an acyclic tripeptide inhibitor of the NS3/NS4A serine protease has been recently reported by Trozzi et al. (27). They found that a single amino acid substitution of NS3 aspartate 168 mediated significant HCV replicon resistance to the drug. In this study, we describe the in vitro selection of HCV replicons with decreased susceptibility to BILN 2061. In addition, we have defined the genotypic basis for the observed resistance phenotype. Finally, by using molecular modeling and site-directed mutagenesis, we have determined the critical amino acid substitutions in the NS3 serine protease conferring resistance to this antiviral agent.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Compounds.
BILN 2061, BI-1, and BI-2 (acyclic tripeptide analogs of BILN
2061) (Fig.
1) were synthesized according to procedures described
previously (
4,
5). IFN-

was purchased from Sigma.
Cells and HCV replicons.
HCV genotype 1b strain N subgenomic replicon cell lines were
obtained and licensed from Stanley Lemon (
13,
32). Replicon
cells were cultured in Dulbeccos modified Eagle medium
(Invitrogen) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum and 400
µg of G418 per ml. Nneo/3-5B(RG) replicon cells (
13) were
cured of the endogenous replicon by passaging cells in the presence
of IFN-

(200 IU/ml) for 2 weeks at high cell confluence, followed
by an additional week of passage in the absence of IFN-

. To
confirm curing, cells were treated with 400 µg of G418
per ml for 3.5 weeks, after which time no G418-resistant colonies
were detected. Loss of the replicon was also confirmed with
a real-time reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) assay for HCV
RNA with a detection limit of 0.1 copy per cell.
In vitro selection of BILN 2061-resistant colonies.
The selection protocol was performed as described by Trozzi et al. (27) with the following modifications. Replicon cells (2 x 104) were plated in 10-cm-diameter tissue culture dishes and cultured in the presence of selection medium containing 400 µg of G418 per ml, 2 µg of blasticidin per ml, and 40 nM (10 times the 50% inhibitory concentration [IC50]) BILN 2061. After approximately 2 weeks, colonies of cells resistant to BILN 2061 and antibiotics became visible. Some of these resistant colonies were isolated, grown in the presence of BILN 2061 for about another 2 weeks, and subsequently characterized. Replicon cells incubated in the selection medium without BILN 2061 were used for the parental cell control.
Sequence analysis of replicon RNA.
Total RNA was extracted from parental and inhibitor-resistant cells with an RNeasy mini kit (QIAGEN). RNA was extracted according to the manufacturer's instructions. HCV replicon cDNA was synthesized with the oligo(dA)20 and SuperScript III first-strand synthesis system for RT-PCR (Invitrogen) according to the manufacturer's instructions. The cDNA coding for the HCV NS3-5B region was amplified by PCR with Platinum Pfx DNA polymerase (Invitrogen) and oligonucleotides SNS3-5-s (5'-GATAATACCATGGCGCCCATCACGGCCTAC-3') and SNS3-5-as (5'-GGAAATGGCCTATTGGCCTGGAGTGTTTAGCTC-3'). The underlined portion of SNS3-5-s and all of SNS3-5-as correspond to nucleotides 3423 to 3440 and 9395 to 9427, respectively, of HCV strain N (GenBank accession number AF139594). At least three independent PCRs were performed for each sample, and PCR products were pooled. Amplified cDNAs were purified with the QIAquick PCR purification kit (QIAGEN), and nucleotide sequences were determined by automated sequencing with the Applied Biosystems v1.1 sequence system.
Drug susceptibility assay.
The inhibitory effects of compounds on viral replicon were tested on the inhibitor-selected colonies and parental cells by a secreted alkaline phosphatase (SEAP) assay as described previously (32). Briefly, 1,500 cells were placed into each well of a 96-well plate. The next day, cell culture supernatant was removed in order to reduce background SEAP, and fresh medium containing compound was added. After another 4 days of culture, the supernatant was assayed with the Phospha-Light SEAP reporter gene assay system (ABI) according to the manufacturer's instructions. The IC50 was then determined by nonlinear regression analysis with Prism (GraphPad Software, Inc.). Cellular toxicity was measured by the 3-[4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl]-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide colorimetric assay (24).
Construction of molecular clones containing NS3 serine protease mutants.
The replicon obtained from Stanley Lemon has HIV tat followed by the gene encoding the 2A protease of foot-and-mouth disease virus fused to the 5' end of the neomycin resistance gene. When Huh-7 cells containing a SEAP reporter gene under the control of the HIV long terminal repeat are transfected with this replicon RNA, SEAP is produced (32). However, the SEAP reporter assay does not produce a sufficient signal in a transient-replication assay with replicons containing the NS3 serine protease mutations. Therefore, the Tat-2A-Neo region was replaced with a sequence encoding the 12 N-terminal amino acids of the HCV core fused to the firefly luciferase gene. The NS3 mutations R155Q, A156T, and D168V were separately introduced into the plasmid with the QuikChange multisite-directed mutagenesis kit (Stratagene) and the 5'-phosphorylated oligonucleotides 5'-GCTGTGGGCGTCTTCCAGGCCGCTGTATGCACCCGG-3' (nucleotides 3870 to 3905 of HCV strain N),5'-GCTGTGGGCGTCTTCCGGACCGCTGTATGCACCCGG-3' (nucleotides 3870 to 3905 of HCV strain N), and 5'-GGTTGCAAAGGCGGTGGTTTTTGTCCCCGTTGAGTCC-3' (nucleotides 3908 to 3944 of HCV strain N), respectively. In each oligonucleotide, the introduced mutation is underlined.
RNA transcription and RNA transient-transfection assay.
For in vitro RNA transcription, XbaI-linearized replicon plasmids and the Megascript T7 kit (Ambion) were used according to the manufacturer's instructions. Cured Nneo/3-5B(RG) cells (107) were washed twice with Dulbecco's phosphate-buffered saline without Ca2+ and Mg2+ (Invitrogen) and then mixed with 20 µg of replicon RNA in a Gene Pulser cuvette with a 0.4-cm electrode gap (Bio-Rad). Electroporation was immediately performed at 970 V and 25 µF with two manual pulses. Transfected cells were plated into 96-well plates with 5,000 cells per well. Compounds at various concentrations were added into cells after 2 h and were cocultured for 4 days. The cells were lysed with passive lysis buffer, and luciferase activity was measured with the luciferase assay system kit (Promega) and Wallac 1420 work station (PerkinElmer Life Science) as described by the manufacturers. Luciferase activity was measured 4 h posttransfection without drug to determine the efficiency of transfection. Replication capacity was determined by measuring the luciferase activity of transfected cells after 4 days of culture in the absence of drug. IC50s were determined according to the procedure described above.
Structural analysis and modeling.
Coordinates for the three-dimensional structure of the full-length NS3 protein were taken from Protein Data Bank entry 1CU1 (31). A model of BILN 2061 was docked into the protein according to the reported binding mode of a close analog (28) with the InsightII software package (Accelrys, Inc.).

RESULTS
Resistant colonies were generated by in vitro selection.
In order to select replicons with decreased susceptibility to
BILN 2061, replicon cells were treated with 40 nM (10 times
the IC
50) BILN 2061. Two weeks posttreatment, a total of 10
colonies were identified on the cell culture dish. Since 2
x 10
4 cells were used initially and the cells were not split during
the selection procedure, resistance to BILN 2061 was shown by
approximately 1 of every 2,000 cells. Of the 10 colonies, 4
were too small to expand. After isolation, two of the remaining
six colonies did not grow well in the presence of the concentration
of BILN 2061 initially used to select resistant mutants. Therefore,
the remaining four colonies (SB1, SB4, SB5, and SB6) were expanded
and studied in detail. Each cell line (SB1, SB4, SB5, and SB6)
was cultured in the presence of different concentrations of
BILN 2061 in triplicate, and IC
50s were determined by nonlinear
regression analysis (Table
1). All colonies had growth rates
similar to those of cells that were grown in parallel but in
the absence of BILN 2061 (parental cells). As measured by the
SEAP assay, the IC
50 for SB4 was 72-fold higher than that for
the wild-type replicon cell line, while SB1, SB5, and SB6 showed
much higher resistance levels (IC
50s for them increased 1,228-,
635-, and 553-fold, respectively) (Table
1). However, all of
the colonies maintained sensitivity to IFN-

(Table
1), indicating
that the resistance was inhibitor specific.
The appearance of phenotypic resistance to BILN 2061 is associated with specific genotypic changes in the serine protease.
In order to detect distinct replicon mutations associated with
resistance, the NS3/NS4A coding regions from resistant colonies
were sequenced and compared with the same regions from parental
cells. All four colonies contained mutations not observed in
parental cells in the NS3 region (Table
1). These mutations
appeared in both the serine protease and the helicase domains
(Fig.
2A). Mutation A156T in the NS3 serine protease region
was observed in two of the four colonies. However, during selection
this mutation developed together with other mutations, such
as T72I and P88L in SB1 and I71T and T312A in SB5. The D168V
mutation found in SB6 has been identified by others as a major
mutation that renders antiviral resistance in similar studies
using both BILN 2061 (Lin et al., Hepatology 38, abstr. 1000)
and an acyclic tripeptide inhibitor (
27). This mutation developed
together with T260A during the selection procedure. It is notable
that SB4, which possessed only an R155Q mutation in the NS3
region, was less resistant to BILN 2061 than the other colonies.
No mutations were observed in the NS4A coding region or in the
NS3/NS4A serine protease cleavage site in any of the colonies.
Modeling of NS3 mutations.
The three-dimensional locations in NS3 of the eight mutations
observed in this study are shown in Fig.
2A along with the expected
binding location of BILN 2061 (
28). Three mutations, R155Q,
A156T, and D168V, are close to the inhibitor binding site. Because
of their close proximity, these three mutations are likely to
have a significant impact upon the binding affinity of BILN
2061. A close-up view of the positions of these three mutations
relative to BILN 2061 is shown in Fig.
2B. The side chains of
residues 156 and 168 make contact with the cyclopentylcarbamate
portion of BILN 2061. The side chain of residue 155 makes contact
with the quinoline ring system of BILN 2061. Mutations at any
of these positions are expected to disrupt Van der Waals contact
between the protein and ligand and lead to decreased inhibitory
potency for the mutant enzymes, in accord with the observations
above. The remaining five mutations are either distal within
the serine protease domain, i.e., residues 71, 72, and 88, or
even further distant within the helicase domain, i.e., residues
260 and 312. How mutations at these non-active-site positions
could impact BILN 2061 binding, if there is any effect, is unclear.
The location of residues 71, 72, and 88 near the NS4A activation
protein suggests that they may play a role in influencing enzyme
activation, but further experimentation would be required to
evaluate this possibility.
An amino acid alignment of the NS3 region containing these mutations revealed that R155 and A156 are conserved across HCV genotypes and subtypes (Fig. 3) but that D168 is relatively less conserved. Glutamine is found at position 168 in genotypes 3a, 3b, and 10a, and glutamic acid is seen in genotype 5a. It is not known what impact these differences will have on sensitivity to BILN 2061, since it has not been assessed in these genotypes.
Sensitivity of single-mutation replicons to inhibitors.
To ascertain whether the NS3 mutations R155Q, A156T, and D168V
are responsible for the resistance, we introduced these mutations
individually into a subgenomic replicon containing a luciferase
reporter gene. RNA from these replicon constructs was used to
transfect cured Nneo/3-5B(RG) cells, which support replication
of HCV replicons much more efficiently than Huh-7 cells (
8,
27). The transfected cells were grown in the presence of different
concentrations of drug for 4 days, and then the IC
50s were determined
as described in Materials and Methods.
All three mutations significantly reduced the potency of the serine protease inhibitor BILN 2061 (Table 2), with IC50 increases of 24-fold for R155Q, 357-fold for A156T, and 144-fold for D168V. The relative effects of these individual mutations on viral resistance to BILN 2061, A156T > D168V > R155Q, is in agreement with the observation from resistant colonies (Table 1) that SB4, which contains the R155Q mutation, had the smallest IC50 increase compared to other mutants, while SB1 and SB5, containing the A156T mutation, showed the highest resistance levels. However, the molecular clone containing the single mutation A156T was more susceptible to BILN 2061 than either SB1 or SB5 (Tables 1 and 2). These differences may be due either to compensatory mutations that developed during selection (T72I and P88L in SB1 or I71T and T312A in SB5) or to the different assays used in these experiments. The SEAP assay was used for stable replicon cell lines, whereas the luciferase reporter assay was used for molecular clones containing single mutations. Similar results were obtained when the molecular clone containing D168V was compared to SB6 (Tables 1 and 2). As was observed for the resistant colonies, these individual mutations had no effect on replicon sensitivity to IFN-
(Table 2).
View this table:
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TABLE 2. Sensitivities of replicons with single NS3 mutations to HCV serine protease inhibitors and IFN- in a transient-transfection assaya
|
To assess cross-resistance, two acyclic tripeptide analogs of
BILN 2061, BI-1 and BI-2 (Fig.
1), were used to test the wild-type
replicon and replicons containing single mutations in NS3. These
compounds are structurally similar to the inhibitor used by
Trozzi et al. (
27) to select resistant HCV replicons. The HCV
inhibitory potencies of these two compounds against the wild-type
replicon are about 100-fold weaker than that of BILN 2061 (Table
2). All three mutant replicons showed a high level of resistance
to compound BI-2 at 20 µM, which was the highest concentration
used. The R155Q mutant showed a similar magnitude of potency
loss to all three compounds, which may be because all of the
compounds contain the same methoxy quinoline group that makes
direct contact with residue 155. The smaller effects for the
acyclic analogs BI-1 and BI-2 might also be due to their intrinsic
affinity for enzyme and relatively suboptimal interactions with
mutant residues. The D168V replicon was more sensitive to BI-1
(the IC
50 increase was 22-fold) than it was to BILN 2061 (the
IC
50 increase was 144-fold). The
tert-butyl moiety in BI-1,
instead of the cyclopentyl moiety found in BILN 2061, may account
for this change by increasing the ability to bind to mutated
residue 168.
Replication capacity of single-mutation replicons.
Since the copy number of the luciferase gene is determined by the replication level of the corresponding replicon RNA (15), the replication capacity of each mutant can be determined by measuring luciferase activity in a lysate of transfected cells. Each mutant replicon was transfected in the absence of BILN 2061, and luciferase activity was measured 4 days posttransfection. Luciferase activities from the mutant replicons were then compared with the luciferase activity from the wild-type replicon. Each of the replicons with a single mutation in the NS3 serine protease showed a greatly reduced level of replication (Fig. 4). All of them had very similar levels of luciferase activity at 4 h after transfection, indicating comparable levels of RNA transfection and translation ability. At 4 days after transfection, the R155Q, A156T, and D168V mutants retained only 17, 4, and 6% of wild-type replication capacity, respectively (Fig. 4). Despite the reduction in replication and the corresponding reduction in luciferase seen with the mutant replicons, the luciferase activity remained high enough for the accurate determination of IC50s (Table 2).

DISCUSSION
We report here that the in vitro selection of HCV replicon with
a fixed concentration of HCV serine protease inhibitor BILN
2061 leads to the selection of specific mutations in the serine
protease gene which confer reduced susceptibility to the inhibitor.
Three-dimensional analysis indicates that three residues at
positions 155, 156, and 168 within the active site are likely
the structurally most dominant sites for conferring resistance.
Site-directed mutagenesis of these individual mutations into
replicons confirmed that each could play a role in the development
of resistance. While all of the potency decreases for the mutations
are large enough to be significant in an in vivo situation,
there is the trend that the R155 mutation gives less of an effect
than either the A156 or the D168 mutation. This may, in part,
be due to the polarity retention in the R155Q mutation, while
changes at residues 156 and 168 involve a polarity change. A
complete reversal of the character of a protein residue that
contacts an inhibitor could be one factor leading to a larger
resistance magnitude in those cases. A detailed atomic analysis,
however, would require further X-ray crystallographic studies
of both wild-type and mutant enzymes.
A recent study using HCV NS3/NS4A serine protease inhibitor VX-950 (Lin et al., Hepatology 38, abstr. 1000) reported the selection of resistant colonies that contained an A156S mutation. Lin et al. showed that a replicon containing A156S was sensitive to BILN 2061. In contrast, we found that a replicon containing A156T was 357-fold-more resistant to BILN 2061. Although the reason(s) for the differences in potency loss is unclear, the additional methyl of the threonine residue relative to serine may create additional steric hindrance that might cause the A156T mutant to be more resistant than the A156S mutant. As stated above, residue 156 makes intimate contact with several atoms of the ligand, and an additional methyl group may make a significant impact. A more detailed structural analysis, including protein crystallographic studies of the mutant enzymes, would be required for a more complete understanding of this differential effect.
The polarity changes may also play a role in the lower replication capacity of the A156T and D168V replicons relative to that of the R155Q replicon. However, the effect on replication by all three mutations was significant. Considering the conserved nature of these residues in various HCV genotypes (Fig. 3) and the reduced replication of replicons containing the single mutations (Fig. 4), it is unlikely that there are preexisting mutants containing only changes at any one of these residues in the natural population.
The role of the individual mutations at NS3 positions 71, 72, 88, 260, and 312 was not studied. However, the phenotypic resistance of molecular clones containing single amino acid mutations at position 155, 156, or 168 correlates well with the phenotypic susceptibility of replicon cell line colonies that contain those mutations. Therefore, the other mutations may play a compensatory role for replication but not for resistance (19). This possibility is supported by the observation that these residues are far from the serine protease active site. It is also supported by the observations that the resistant colonies containing multiple mutations grew normally but that the replicons containing a single change at residue 155, 156, or 168 exhibited greatly reduced HCV RNA replication in the transient-replication assay. Interestingly, resistant colony SB4 had only the R155Q mutation in NS3, indicating that mutations from different gene coding regions might compensate for the defect in replication caused by this NS3 mutation (data not shown). Engineering combinations of mutations into replicons and studying their replication capacity would be helpful for understanding the interaction of the various residues.
In the region of the active-site mutations, BI-1 and BI-2 are expected to project functional groups that are either structurally identical to or very similar to BILN 2061 when it is bound to the enzyme. Thus, it is expected that the losses in potency against the mutants are similar for all three serine protease inhibitors. The accurate comparison of the decrease (n-fold) in the potency of BI-2 to that of BILN 2061 is made difficult by the dramatically different potencies against the wild-type enzyme. Our results showed that any one of several single mutations results in a high level of resistance to BILN 2061. However, replicons containing either multiple mutations or single engineered mutations were still sensitive to IFN-
(Table 1 and 2), indicating that combination therapy similar to HIV treatment using several drugs with different functions and targets may help overcome drug-resistant mutations and control HCV infection.
In this study, we modified the resistance selection protocol used by Trozzi et al. (27) so that there was no cell split during the selection procedure. Without cell splitting, a resistant colony can be assumed to grow from a single cell. Therefore, by counting the number of total visible colonies and knowing the initial cell number, we roughly calculated the frequency of resistant mutations that happened in the population under the experimental conditions used. In protocols that include splitting cells, it is possible that all colonies can arise from a single mutated cell, which raises the possibility that cells containing adaptive mutations that allow faster growth lead to selection of only the dominant mutants. Indeed, in this study, where no cell spitting occurred, a larger variety of mutations was observed than was seen in the studies by Trozzi et al. (27) and Lin et al. (Hepatology 38, abstr. 1000).
In conclusion, BILN 2061 encountered resistance from HCV replicons mediated by mutations at the serine protease active site. The resistance pattern found in vitro may be of benefit for the prediction of in vivo resistance profiles and the development of next-generation serine protease inhibitors. Finally, the sensitivity of BILN 2061-resistant mutants to IFN-
indicates that a cocktail therapy combining several drugs may be necessary to overcome drug resistance in vivo.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Stanley Lemon for providing replicon cell lines. We
also thank Teresa Ng for providing the replicon-cured cell line;
Yupeng He, Moshe Weitzberg, Rolf Wagner, and Mike Tufano for
helpful discussions; and Shing Chang and Bill Kohlbrenner for
providing continuous support.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department R-47D, Building AP52-N, 200 Abbott Park Rd., Abbott Park, IL 60064-6217. Phone: (847) 935-8314. Fax: (847) 938-2756. E-mail:
liangjun.lu{at}abbott.com.


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Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, June 2004, p. 2260-2266, Vol. 48, No. 6
0066-4804/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.48.6.2260-2266.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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