Synthesis and evaluation of orally active small molecule HIV-1 Nef antagonists

[Display omitted] The HIV-1 Nef accessory factor enhances viral replication and promotes immune system evasion of HIV-infected cells, making it an attractive target for drug discovery. Recently we described a novel class of diphenylpyrazolodiazene compounds that bind directly to Nef in vitro and inh...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters 2016-03, Vol.26 (5), p.1480-1484
Hauptverfasser: Emert-Sedlak, Lori A., Loughran, H. Marie, Shi, Haibin, Kulp, John L., Shu, Sherry T., Zhao, Jielu, Day, Billy W., Wrobel, Jay E., Reitz, Allen B., Smithgall, Thomas E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] The HIV-1 Nef accessory factor enhances viral replication and promotes immune system evasion of HIV-infected cells, making it an attractive target for drug discovery. Recently we described a novel class of diphenylpyrazolodiazene compounds that bind directly to Nef in vitro and inhibit Nef-dependent HIV-1 infectivity and replication in cell culture. However, these first-generation Nef antagonists have several structural liabilities, including an azo linkage that led to poor oral bioavailability. The azo group was therefore replaced with either a one- or two-carbon linker. The resulting set of non-azo analogs retained nanomolar binding affinity for Nef by surface plasmon resonance, while inhibiting HIV-1 replication with micromolar potency in cell-based assays without cytotoxicity. Computational docking studies show that these non-azo analogs occupy the same predicted binding site within the HIV-1 Nef dimer interface as the original azo compound. Computational methods also identified a hot spot for inhibitor binding within this site that is defined by conserved HIV-1 Nef residues Asp108, Leu112, and Pro122. Pharmacokinetic evaluation of the non-azo B9 analogs in mice showed that replacement of the azo linkage dramatically enhanced oral bioavailability without substantially affecting plasma half-life or clearance. The improved oral bioavailability of non-azo diphenylpyrazolo Nef antagonists provides a starting point for further drug lead optimization in support of future efficacy testing in animal models of HIV/AIDS.
ISSN:0960-894X
1464-3405
DOI:10.1016/j.bmcl.2016.01.043