| Literature DB >> 15277684 |
Daria J Hazuda1, Neville J Anthony, Robert P Gomez, Samson M Jolly, John S Wai, Linghang Zhuang, Thorsten E Fisher, Mark Embrey, James P Guare, Melissa S Egbertson, Joseph P Vacca, Joel R Huff, Peter J Felock, Marc V Witmer, Kara A Stillmock, Robert Danovich, Jay Grobler, Michael D Miller, Amy S Espeseth, Lixia Jin, I-Wu Chen, Jiunn H Lin, Kelem Kassahun, Joan D Ellis, Bradley K Wong, Wei Xu, Paul G Pearson, William A Schleif, Riccardo Cortese, Emilio Emini, Vincenzo Summa, M Katharine Holloway, Steven D Young.
Abstract
The increasing incidence of resistance to current HIV-1 therapy underscores the need to develop antiretroviral agents with new mechanisms of action. Integrase, one of three viral enzymes essential for HIV-1 replication, presents an important yet unexploited opportunity for drug development. We describe here the identification and characterization of L-870,810, a small-molecule inhibitor of HIV-1 integrase with potent antiviral activity in cell culture and good pharmacokinetic properties. L-870,810 is an inhibitor with an 8-hydroxy-(1,6)-naphthyridine-7-carboxamide pharmacophore. The compound inhibits HIV-1 integrase-mediated strand transfer, and its antiviral activity in vitro is a direct consequence of this ascribed effect on integration. L-870,810 is mechanistically identical to previously described inhibitors from the diketo acid series; however, viruses selected for resistance to L-870,810 contain mutations (integrase residues 72, 121, and 125) that uniquely confer resistance to the naphthyridine. Conversely, mutations associated with resistance to the diketo acid do not engender naphthyridine resistance. Importantly, the mutations associated with resistance to each of these inhibitors map to distinct regions within the integrase active site. Therefore, we propose a model of the two inhibitors that is consistent with this observation and suggests specific interactions with discrete binding sites for each ligand. These studies provide a structural basis and rationale for developing integrase inhibitors with the potential for unique and nonoverlapping resistance profiles.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15277684 PMCID: PMC509174 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0402357101
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205