| Literature DB >> 17367121 |
Plinio Perrone1, Giovanna M Luoni, Mary Rose Kelleher, Felice Daverio, Annette Angell, Sinead Mulready, Costantino Congiatu, Sonal Rajyaguru, Joseph A Martin, Vincent Levêque, Sophie Le Pogam, Isabel Najera, Klaus Klumpp, David B Smith, Christopher McGuigan.
Abstract
We report the application of our phosphoramidate ProTide technology to the ribonucleoside analogue 4'-azidouridine to generate novel antiviral agents for the inhibition of hepatitis C virus (HCV). 4'-Azidouridine did not inhibit HCV, although 4'-azidocytidine was a potent inhibitor of HCV replication under similar assay conditions. However 4'-azidouridine triphosphate was a potent inhibitor of RNA synthesis by HCV polymerase, raising the question as to whether our phosphoramidate ProTide approach could effectively deliver 4'-azidouridine monophosphate to HCV replicon cells and unleash the antiviral potential of the triphosphate. Twenty-two phosphoramidates were prepared, including variations in the aryl, ester, and amino acid regions. A number of compounds showed sub-micromolar inhibition of HCV in cell culture without detectable cytotoxicity. These results confirm that phosphoramidate ProTides can deliver monophosphates of ribonucleoside analogues and suggest a potential path to the generation of novel antiviral agents against HCV infection. The generic message is that ProTide synthesis from inactive parent nucleosides may be a warranted drug discovery strategy.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17367121 DOI: 10.1021/jm0613370
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Chem ISSN: 0022-2623 Impact factor: 7.446