| Literature DB >> 23239505 |
Kantharaju Kamanna1, Rachna Aneja, Caitlin Duffy, Pamela Kubinski, Diogo Rodrigo Moreira, Lauren D Bailey, Karyn McFadden, Arne Schön, Andrew Holmes, Ferit Tuzer, Mark Contarino, Ernesto Freire, Irwin M Chaiken.
Abstract
We investigated the derivation of non-natural peptide triazole dual receptor site antagonists of HIV-1 Env gp120 to establish a pathway for developing peptidomimetic antiviral agents. Previously we found that the peptide triazole HNG-156 [R-I-N-N-I-X-W-S-E-A-M-M-CONH(2), in which X=ferrocenyltriazole-Pro (FtP)] has nanomolar binding affinity to gp120, inhibits gp120 binding to CD4 and the co-receptor surrogate mAb 17b, and has potent antiviral activity in cell infection assays. Furthermore, truncated variants of HNG-156, typified by UM-24 (Cit-N-N-I-X-W-S-CONH(2)) and containing the critical central stereospecific (L)X-(L)W cluster, retain the functional characteristics of the parent peptide triazole. In the current work, we examined the possibility of replacing natural with unnatural residue components in UM-24 to the greatest extent possible. The analogue with the critical "hot spot" residue Trp 6 replaced with L-3-benzothienylalanine (Bta) (KR-41), as well as a completely non-natural analogue containing D-amino acid substitutions outside the central cluster (KR-42, (D)Cit-(D)N-(D)N-(D)I-X-Bta-(D)S-CONH(2)), retained the dual receptor site antagonism/antiviral activity signature. The results define differential functional roles of subdomains within the peptide triazole and provide a structural basis for the design of metabolically stable peptidomimetic inhibitors of HIV-1 Env gp120.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23239505 PMCID: PMC3810028 DOI: 10.1002/cmdc.201200422
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ChemMedChem ISSN: 1860-7179 Impact factor: 3.466