| Literature DB >> 21994705 |
Laurent Chatel-Chaix1, Martin Baril1, Daniel Lamarre1.
Abstract
Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is a serious and growing threat to human health. The current treatment provides limited efficacy and is poorly tolerated, highlighting the urgent medical need for novel therapeutics. The membrane-targeted NS3 protein in complex with the NS4A comprises a serine protease domain (NS3/4A protease) that is essential for viral polyprotein maturation and contributes to the evasion of the host innate antiviral immunity by HCV. Therefore, the NS3/4A protease represents an attractive target for drug discovery, which is tied in with the challenge to develop selective small-molecule inhibitors. A rational drug design approach, based on the discovery of N-terminus product inhibition, led to the identification of potent and orally bioavailable NS3 inhibitors that target the highly conserved protease active site. This review summarizes the NS3 protease inhibitors currently challenged in clinical trials as one of the most promising antiviral drug class, and possibly among the first anti-HCV agents to be approved for the treatment of HCV infection.Entities:
Keywords: HCV; HCV replicon; NS3 protease; antiviral therapy; clinical trial; protease inhibitor
Year: 2010 PMID: 21994705 PMCID: PMC3185733 DOI: 10.3390/v2081752
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.818
Figure 1.Representations of the boceprevir bound to the NS3/4A protease domain. (A) Ribbon drawing of the tertiary structure of a monomer NS3/4A protease domain. The NS4A peptide is shown in red. The side chains of the catalytic triad (H57, D81 and S139) are shown as yellow ball-and-stick models. (B) Zoomed-in view of the NS3/4A active site with the boceprevir represented as sticks in atom specific coloring (green for carbon, red for oxygen, and blue for nitrogen). (C) The bulk of the protein is shown as a Connolly surface, while residues of the catalytic triad (yellow) and residues R155 and A156 for which mutations confer resistance to most NS3 protease inhibitors (purple) are represented as mesh surface with the position of the side chains shown as sticks. The arrow points to the reversible covalent bond formed between the boceprevir and the active site S139. This figure was generated with PDB ID number: 2OC8 [31] using Pymol.
In vivo and in vitro characteristics and potency of HCV protease inhibitors currently in clinical development.